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Discontinuity (geotechnical engineering)

About: Discontinuity (geotechnical engineering) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4517 publications have been published within this topic receiving 90201 citations. The topic is also known as: joint.


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TL;DR: In this article, a rectangular dislocation surface (i.e., a surface across which there is a discontinuity in the displacement vector) is used as a model of a vertical transcurrent fault and the results of Steketee (1958a) are employed to derive, in analytical form, the displacement field throughout a semi-infinite elastic medium due to such a dislocation.
Abstract: A rectangular dislocation surface (i.e., a surface across which there is a discontinuity in the displacement vector) is used as a model of a vertical transcurrent fault. The results of Steketee (1958a) are employed to derive, in analytical form, the displacement field throughout a semi-infinite elastic medium due to such a dislocation. In particular, the displacements of the surface of the medium are calculated in some detail, and contour maps of the various components are given for two representative cases. The solution to the limiting case of a fault of infinite length is also included. Methods are then discussed for the determination of the depth of a surface fault from measurements of the deformation of the ground produced by it, and these are applied to the faults associated with the Tango and North Idu earthquakes, and to the San Andreas fault. In each of these cases, the general features of the crustal deformations agree well with the predictions of the theory, and it is concluded that dislocation theory provides a good description of the effects of fracture in the earth's crust.

423 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an internally consistent pressure calibration scale based on the coesite-stishovite transition pressure Ptr(GPa) = 7.45(±0.3) + 2.1(± 0.3 ) × 10−3T(°C) was constructed.
Abstract: Density and elasticity data are consistent with, but do not require, a uniform upper- and lower-mantle composition. Such data cannot at present resolve the small changes in physical properties that would be required to keep distinct mantle reservoirs dynamically separated. Alternatively, the issue of chemical stratification in the mantle can be addressed by analyzing the details of the phase equilibria of the appropriate minerals. In order to do this we construct an internally consistent pressure calibration scale which is based in part on the coesite-stishovite transition pressure Ptr(GPa) = 7.45(±0.3) + 2.1(±0.3) × 10−3T(°C) according to our reanalysis of the available data. We conclude that a discontinuous reaction occurs in the olivine component (α+γ = α+β) of the mantle at the conditions of the 400-km seismological discontinuity; however, no discontinuous reactions corresponding to the 670-km discontinuity have yet been identified. The only reaction observed in diamond cell experiments at approximately the pressures existing at 670-km depth, the breakdown of γ-spinel to form a silicate perovskite assemblage, appears not to satisfy the observed sharpness of this discontinuity. Thus it may be necessary to invoke either a univariant reaction that has not yet been observed experimentally or a chemical discontinuity at this depth. As the mantle is likely to be at temperatures higher than those of the experiments (estimated to be near 1000°C), additional univariant reactions involving the silicate ilmenite or garnet phases that are predicted to occur may be significant. One possible interpretation is that the mantle is of uniform composition and that such (hypothetical) reactions produce the 670-km discontinuity. This would imply that the phase assemblages so far studied in high-pressure-temperature experiments are not those occurring in the mantle. Alternatively, the mantle could be chemically stratified.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the application of close-range terrestrial digital photogrammetry and terrestrial laser scanning for discontinuity characterization on rock cuts is presented, and case studies are used to estimate the accuracy of several 3D model registration approaches.

394 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of joints on seismic wave propagation is analyzed in terms of theories concerning the roughness of the two joint surfaces and their deformation under stress, and the results of laboratory measurements of seismic pulses transmitted across natural joints with different specific stiffnesses.

383 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20224
2021155
2020163
2019167
2018179
2017148