Geotechnology Module Two Notes Full 1
Geotechnology Module Two Notes Full 1
WRITTEN BY:
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J.N. KOMU
DEPT. OF BIULDING ENGINEERING
2. FAULT.
a. Terms.
❖ Fault.
❖ Fold.
b. Elements of a fault.
❖ Fault plane.
❖ Up throw side.
❖ Downthrown side.
❖ Foot wall.
❖ Throw.
❖ Heave.
❖ Dip.
c. Fault recognition.
❖ Water fall.
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❖ Fault breccias.
❖ Change in river course.
d. Geological effects caused by faults.
❖ Lava flow.
❖ Dykes.
❖ Mineralization.
❖ Topographical changes.
3. TUNNELS
a. Purposes of rock tunneling.
4. QUARRIES.
a. Types of quarries.
❖ Hard rock quarry.
❖ Soft rock quarry.
b. Blasting methods.
❖ Weak zones.
❖ Mineral zones.
❖ Seismic velocity.
❖ Homogeneity.
c. Excavation plant.
❖ Plasticity.
❖ Bulking.
❖ Load bearing capacity.
❖ Seismic velocity.
5. DAMS
1. Purposes of dam construction.
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6. MAPS
1. Types.
❖ Solid.
❖ Drift.
2. Features.
❖ Scale.
❖ Key.
3. Types of strata.
4. Undeformed.
❖ Folded beds.
❖ Outcrops.
❖ Deformed strata.
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Terminologies
❖ In geology, a fault is a planar fracture or discontinuity in a volume of rock,
across which there has been significant displacement along the fractures as a
result of earth movement.
❖ A fault line is the surface trace of a fault, the line of intersection between
the fault plane and the Earth's surface.[1]
❖ Since faults do not usually consist of a single, clean fracture, geologists use
the term fault zone when referring to the zone of complex deformation
associated with the fault plane.
❖ The two sides of a non-vertical fault are known as the hanging wall and
footwall.
❖ By definition, the hanging wall occurs above the fault plane and
the footwall occurs below the fault.[2]
❖ The fault plane is where the action is. It is a flat surface that may
be vertical or sloping.
❖ The line it makes on the Earth's surface is the fault trace.
❖ Where the fault plane is sloping, the upper side is the hanging wall and the
lower side is the footwall.
❖ When the fault plane is vertical, there is no hanging wall or footwall.
❖ Any fault plane can be completely described with two measurements:
its strike and its dip.
❖ The strike is the direction of the fault trace on the Earth's surface.
❖ The dip is the measurement of how steeply the fault plane slopes—if you
dropped a marble on the fault plane, it would roll exactly down the
direction of dip.
❖ Process of faulting
❖ The process by which faulting occurs are related to three main forces.
❖ These are tension, compression and shear
❖ When these forces become intense, a line of weakness called a
fault develops on the rock mass.
❖ Eventually, the forces will result in the displacement of the two
block masses from their original position either vertically or
horizontally.
❖ For example:
1) Tensional forces cause the movement of landmasses away from
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one another.
❖ They pull the landmasses apart, resulting in their tearing as shown in
figure 1.14a
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1) Normal fault
❖ A Normal fault results from tension in a vertical or an inclined fault plane
as shown in figure 1.15(a-b)
❖ The inclination of the fault plane and the direction of downthrow are
both to the left or both to the right.
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❖ The forces that create normal faults are pulling the sides apart,
or extensional.
❖ In a normal fault, the block above the fault moves down relative to the block
below the fault.
other.
❖ The one you see here is a normal fault.
❖ A normal fault drops rock on one side of the fault down relative to the
other side.
❖ Take a look at the side that shows the fault and arrows indicating movement.
❖ See the block farthest to the right that is shaped kind of like a foot?
❖ That's the foot wall.
❖ Now look at the block on the other side of the fault.
2) A Reverse fault
❖ A Reversed fault is caused by compression where the rock bends on one
side of the fault plane are thrust over those on the other side as shown
in figure 1.16(a-b)
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❖ In a reverse fault, the block above the fault moves up relative to the block
below the fault.
❖ A reverse fault is called a thrust fault if the dip of the fault plane is
small. [Other names: thrust fault, reverse-slip fault or compressional
fault] EX., Rocky Mountains, Himalayas
❖ When movement along a fault is the reverse of what you would expect
with normal gravity we call them reverse faults!
Strike-slip fault
❖ If the block on the far side of the fault moves to the left, as shown in this
animation, the fault is called left-lateral.
❖ If the block on the far side moves to the right, the fault is called
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right- lateral.
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❖ The rocky blocks on either side of strike-slip faults, on the other hand,
scrape along side-by-side.
❖ You can see in the illustration that the movement is horizontal and the rock
layers beneath the surface haven't been moved up or down on either side of
the fault.
❖ Take a look where the fault has ruptured the Earth surface.
❖ Notice that pure strike-slip faults do not produce fault scarps.
❖ The fault surface is usually near vertical and the footwall moves either left
or right or laterally with very little vertical motion.
❖ Strike-slip faults with left-lateral motion are also known as sinistral faults.
[6]
❖ Those with right-lateral motion are also known as dextral faults.
4) A thrust fault
❖ This is caused by strong crustal compression forces.
❖ A block of land is forced to ride on top of another along a fault which is in
a near horizontal position as shown in figure 1.18.
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5) An anticlinal fault
6) Oblique-slip faults
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Oblique-slip fault
7) Listric fault
❖ Listric faults are similar to normal faults but the fault plane curves, the
dip being steeper near the surface, then shallower with increased depth.
❖ The dip may flatten into a sub-horizontal décollement, resulting in
horizontal slip on a horizontal plane.
❖ The illustration shows slumping of the hanging wall along a listric fault.
❖ Where the hanging wall is absent (such as on a cliff) the footwall may
slump in a manner that creates multiple listric faults.
8) Ring fault
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❖ Ring faults are faults that occur within collapsed volcanic calderas and the
sites of bolide strikes, such as the Chesapeake Bay impact crater.
❖ Ring faults may be filled by ring dikes.
❖ Nearly all faults will have some component of both dip-slip (normal or
reverse) and strike-slip, so defining a fault as oblique requires both dip
and strike components to be measurable and significant.
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Real-life
from the central block by tensional forces, leaving room for the central
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block to subside (sink) into the sima (molten rock) as shown in figure
1.20 (b).
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c. Tilt block
❖ If the middle block has greater uplift on one side , then the fault block is
not flat at the top but tilted. It then becomes a tilt block (see figure 1.22).
❖ For example, the west Kenya tilt block, which rises from about 1,800
metres towards lake Victoria to 2100 metres at the foot of Nandi
escarpments.
❖ Similarly, the Ruwenzoris are higher on the eastern side due to tilting
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d. Rift valley
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1) Tension
2) Compression
3) Anticlinal arching
a) Formation by tension
❖ When the layers of rocks are subjected to tensional forces ( forces
pulling away from each other ), lines of weakness occur leading to the
development of adjacent normal faults.
❖ The central block eventually sinks or subsides as the side blocks are
pulled apart.
❖ The outer blocks are pushed over (thrust over) the middle block leaving it
to form the floor of the rift valley.
❖ This leads to the bending of rock layers into a big arch (anticline).
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❖ A gaping crack develops at the crest of the arch due to tension at the top.
❖ The Rhine Rift Valley is believed to have been formed this way.
❖ For example:
❖ The presence of fault scarps can cause difficulty and extra expenses in
the construction of these lines.
2) Faulting may cause sinking of land leading to loss of property and life.
❖ For example: deep faults in some farms in Nakuru area have destroyed
rich agricultural farms.
❖ These may attract settlement. For example the floor of Elgeyo Marakwet.
6) Hot springs and geysers that are commonly associated with faulting can be
earnest for geothermal power for example Olkaria Geothermal Power
Plant in Naivasha.
7) Rift valley scenery such as hot springs, fault scarps and lakes attract
tourists who bring in foreign exchange for example the hot springs of Lake
Bogoria and the Thompson falls of Nyahururu and the impressive Mt.
Longonot are major tourist attractions in Kenya.
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8) Vertical faulting across a river may cause a waterfall which may be used to
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9) Rift faulting may cause an enclosed basin into which rivers flow to
form lakes or areas of inland drainage.
❖ These lakes for example Lakes Baringo and Naivasha may provide water
for irrigation, domestic use and may be rich fishing grounds.
❖ Kangera River now flows eastwards whilst it used to flow westward into
the Congo Basin.
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FOLDING
❖ For instance, weak forces would result in the rocks forming low and
gentle anticlines and broad shallow synclines.
❖ However, when the forces are intense, the folds will be more conspicuous.
❖ Folds can be classified into the following seven types as illustrated in figure
1.11 (a – g)
b) Asymmetrical fold
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c) Over fold
d) Isoclinals folds
e) Recumbent fold
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❖ These folds have an amount of symmetry about the axis of each fold.
b) Asymmetrical fold
❖ The limbs are not symmetrical about the axis and in each fold, one limb
is steeper than the other.
c) Overfold
d) Isoclinals folds
❖ These are a series of close parallel overfolds with all limbs dipping
at approximately the same angle and in the same direction.
e) Recumbent folds
❖ These are overfolds which have been forced over into near
horizontal positions with their actual surfaces nearly horizontal.
❖ The upper limb is pushed over the lower limb along the thrust
plane resulting into horizontal displacement along the thrust plane.
a) Fold Mountains
❖ According to this theory, after the earth had formed, the surface rocks
of the crust cooled and contracted faster than those of the interior.
❖ The conventional currents within the molten rock in the mantle move
in circular motion toward the crust.
❖ These currents exert a frictional drag with the sima rock causing crustal
rock to move horizontally thus resulting in the formation of fold mountains
as shown in figure 1.12
❖ For example, the Atlas Mountains in North West Africa were formed
when the African Plate moved towards the Eurasian plate.
b) Escarpments
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❖ When folding takes place on a rock mass, the extended steep limb from
the anticline forms an escarpment.
❖ This is very common in areas where the process of folding was not
very intense.
❖ They are broad and shallow valleys having gently sloping basins.
❖ These basins or valleys may also contain water in them to form lakes.
d) Depressions
❖ These are deformations or depressions of the crust that has occurred over
a large area.
❖ Warping may result from vertical movement of the rocks of the crust
over only a few metres.
❖ When water collects in such depression, they form lakes while its other
raised regions are responsible for the formation of features such as
raised beaches like those of the Mediterranean Sea.
a) Mountainous areas often receive heavy rain and/or snow, which give rise
to important rivers.
electric power.
❖ For example, Rivers Colorado and Columbia rising from the Rockies and
those rising from the Alps provide suitable sites for hydro-electric
power production.
❖ For example in the alpine ranges the winds sometimes cause destruction
to vineyards.
❖ Indeed, the world’s most active volcanoes today are found near
Fold Mountains.
❖ Some fold mountains and their plateaus contain valuable mineral like
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❖ The Andes contain tin and copper in Bolivia, gold and platinum in
Colombia and silver in Peru.
c) Folding can also lead to the burying of some valuable minerals such
that they are not easily accessible for exploitation.
of Samos.
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SHAFTS
They are usually circular and go straight down until they reach the level at
which the tunnel is going to be built.
❖ Both tucking framing and pile framing have the advantages over sheet
piling of not requiring large guide trestles and heavy driving equipment.
❖ The most vulnerable point in any shaft timbering is the corners, where high
pressures are encountered, and these positions should be specially
strengthened by using corner posts or runners of larger cross section – see
Fig. II.16.
7. Excavate next stage or bay by starting at the top and taking out just
enough soil to allow the next set of head boards to be positioned.
8. If loose subsoils are encountered it will be necessary to line the sides
with driven or placed horizontal poling boards as the work proceeds –
see Figs. II.17 and II.18.
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❖ Where the purpose of the excavation is for the installation of pipe work
alternative methods to tunneling should be considered.
Small diameter pipes
❖ Two methods are available for the installation of small pipes up to 200 m
diameter
1. Thrust boring – a bullet-shaped solid metal head is fixed to the leading end
of the pipe to be installed which is pushed or jacked into the ground
displacing the earth.
2. Auger boring – carried out with a horizontal auger boring tool operating
from a working pit having at least 2,400m long x 1,500m wide clear
dimensions between any temporary supporting members. The boring
operation can be carried out without casings but where the objective is the
installation of services, concrete or steel casings are usually employed. The
auger removes the spoil by working within the bore of the casing which is
being continuously rammed or jacked into position. It is possible to use this
method for diameters of up to 1.000m.
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Pipe jacking
❖ This method can be used for the installation of pipes from 150 to 3,600 mm
diameter but it is mainly employed on the larger diameters of over 1.000m.
basically the procedure is to force the pipes into the subsoil by means of a
❖ The leading pipe is usually fitted with a steel shield or hood to aid the
driving process.
This is a very safe method since the exaction work is carried out from
within the casing or liner and the danger of collapsing excavations is
eliminated; there is also no disruption of the surface or underground
services and it is a practical method for most types of subsoil.
❖ The most common method is to work from a jacking or working pit which is
formed in a similar manner to traditional shafts except that a framed thrust
pad is needed from which to operate the hydraulic jacks.
❖ The working pit must be a large enough for the jacks to be extended and to
allow for new pipe sections to be lowered into the working bay at the
bottom – see Fig.II.19.
❖ Pipe jacking can also be carried out from ground level and is particularly
suitable for driving pipes through an embankment to form a pedestrian
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subway.
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A series of 300 mm diameter lined augered bore holes are driven through
the embankment to accommodate tie bars which are anchored to a
bulkhead frame on the opposite side of the embankment.
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❖ The pipes used in the above techniques are usually classified in diameter
ranges thus:
1. Small pipes – 150 to 900 mm diameter – thrust or auger bored.
2. Medium pipes – 900 to 1,800 mm diameter – pipe jacking
techniques.
3. Large pipes – 1,800 to 3,600 mm diameter – pipe jacking
techniques.
❖ Two materials are in common use for the pipes, namely concrete and steel.
Spun concrete pipes are specially designed with thick walls and have a
rubber joint making them especially suitable for sewers without the need
for extra strengthening.
❖ Larger diameter pipes for pedestrian subway constructions are usually
made of cast concrete and can have special bolted connections making the
joints watertight which also renders them suitable for use as sewer pipes.
Steel pipers have a wall thickness relative to their diameter and usually
have welded joints to give high tensile strength, the alternative being a
flanged and bolted joint.
❖ They are obtainable with various coatings and linings to meet special
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1. Stand-up time is the amount of time a tunnel will support itself without
any added structures. Knowing this time allows the engineers to determine
how much can be excavated before support is needed. The longer the
stand-up time is the faster the excavating will go. Generally certain
configurations of rock and clay will have the greatest stand-up time, and
sand and fine soils will have a much lower stand-up time.[5]
❖ If there is water leaking into the shaft it will become unstable and will
not be safe to work in. To stop this from happening there are a few
common methods. One of the most effective is ground freezing.
❖ To do this pipes are inserted into the ground surrounding the shaft and are
cooled until they freeze. This freezes the ground around each pipe until the
whole shaft is surrounded frozen soil, keeping water out.
❖ The most common method is to install pipes into the ground and to
simply pump the water out. This works for tunnels and shafts.[6]
Machine tunneling.
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❖ Weak zones.
❖ Homogeneity.
❖ Hardness.
❖ Stratification.
❖ Tunnels are dug in types of materials varying from soft clay to hard rock.
The method of tunnel construction depends on such factors as the ground
conditions, the ground water conditions, the length and diameter of the
tunnel drive, the depth of the tunnel, the logistics of supporting the
tunnel excavation, the final use and shape of the tunnel and appropriate
risk management.
Cut-and-cover
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Boring machines
❖ Examples of tunnels
❖ The three eastern portals of Liverpool Edge Hill tunnels, built into a hand
dug deep cutting. The left tunnel with tracks is the short 1846 second
Crown Street Tunnel, next on the right partially hidden by undergrowth
is the 2.03 km (1.26 mi) 1829 Wapping Tunnel, to the right again hidden
by undergrowth, is the original short 1829 Crown Street Tunnel.
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❖ The 1,659-foot (506 m) Donner Pass Summit Tunnel (#6) was in service
from 1868 to 1993.
❖ Liverpool Lime Street Approach. The original two track tunnel was
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removed to create a deep cutting. The road bridges seen across the cutting
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i. Excavating
ii. Wedging
iii. Heating
iv. Blasting
❖ The method is employed when the stones to be quarried are lying buried
in earth or under loose over-burden.
❖ Shovels, pick axes, hammers and chisels etc are made use of for
the purpose.
ii. Wedging
iii. Heating
iv. Blasting
❖ No person except those who have to light the fuses should be allowed
in the danger zone till the explosion has taken place.
d) Responsible person should satisfy himself that all the charges have
exploded by comparing the number of charges fired with the number
of explosions heard.
e) All fuses should be cut to proper length before inserting them into holes.
f) For making holes in cartridges to take detonators only hard wooden
pegs should be used.
❖ Not more than 10 bore holes should be exploded at a time and those
too successively and not simultaneously.
Types of rock
Types of quarries
a) Hard rock quarries.
b) Soft rock quarries.
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Initial scoping
a) Confirmation of suitability of quality of quarried products for use;
b) Initial estimates of resource quantities; and
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❖ These factors also affect the initial consideration of a hard-rock site and
must be considered at the earliest stages of the design process to
establish the potential viability of proceeding with designs.
❖ Processing of material excavated from hard-rock quarries can alter
its potential use (irrespective of the physical properties of the rock).
❖ Different methods of crushing can produce different shapes of
material (which are typically applicable to different potential uses).
the quarry area and will allow the quarry to be ‘zoned’ accordingly.
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❖ The assessment should identify the likely slope failure modes in each
zone and the design rules will be prepared to reflect each area as
appropriate.
❖ This may result in varying bench and slope arrangements in different
areas of the pit and each must be accommodated in the design.
❖ The design rules may also influence such aspects as direction of
working and identify face alignments to be avoided in particular
settings.
be sold as product and to allow sufficient space for the tipping of wastes
as
they arise.
❖ Too often quarries can become quickly ‘muck-bound’ due to an
underestimation of the quantities of waste to be produced at various
stages in the operation.
Design considerations
❖ For hard-rock workings, there are four principal stages in the
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extraction process:
a) Soil and overburden removal;
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Mineral recovery
❖ Hard-rock quarry workings may be wet or dry, depending on the depth
to water table.
❖ It is not common practice to allow pits to flood during operation, and
pumping may be necessary if water collects within the pit during
working.
❖ This may require the formation of profiled floors and sumps to collect
water prior to pumping.
❖ The precise arrangements will reflect the rate of inflow (normally a
function of the porosity and permeability, mainly through joints and
fissures, of the rock mass).
❖ Most hard rock quarries (unless working in very thin rock units
and achieving no significant depth) will be benched.
❖ Maximum bench heights, bench widths and face angles will be
determined principally by geotechnical factors.
❖ However, operational constraints (reach of excavators, capabilities of
drill rigs, quarry geometry) may dictate other arrangements that are less
than those which may acceptable based on a geotechnical assessment.
❖ Similarly, there may be environmental factors that dictate bench geometry
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(e.g. the use of bench alignment and height to screen mobile plant to
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Primary fragmentation
❖ The major costs associated with hard rock quarrying are incurred in the
loading from a rock pile and crushing of broken rock at the processing
plant.
❖ Two basic techniques are commonly used in primary fragmentation:
a) Drilling and blasting; and
b) Mechanical breaking (ripping).
❖ The selection of the method used will take account of:
a) The degree of weathering of the rock mass;
b) The nature and frequency of discontinuities in the rock
mass (fractures, joints, faults, bedding, etc.);
c) The crystalline, nature and grain size of the rock mass; and
d) The impact strength of the rock mass.
❖ The degree of primary fragmentation required is normally geared
to producing acceptable sizes for loading and crushing.
❖ Primary fragmentation should be designed therefore to optimize
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the distribution of particle sizes within the rock pile, compatible with
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Blasting
❖ The degree of fragmentation achieved in the blasting cycle is dependent
on a proper blast design.
❖ Each blast should be considered individually to minimize unwanted
effects (over- or under-breakage of the rock, environmental problems and
safety issues).
❖ Often the primary consideration in determining the size of each blast
(i.e. the amount of rock to be broken on any one shot) is the suppression
of
adverse environmental impacts (vibration and noise).
❖ This, however, may be contrary to the quarry operator’s requirements and
a compromise is often required. A typical quarry production blast is shown
in Plate 4.
❖ Blast design can be time consuming and expensive if considered for
each and every blast in detail.
❖ Consequently, it is common practice to determine a set of rules for a
typical blast in different zones of the quarry to satisfy the often
contradictory requirements for production of broken rock and
environmental protection.
❖ Individual blasts will still require assessment, however, and should
be properly recorded.
❖ The degree of fragmentation produced during blasting is determined by
two principal factors:
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a) Explosive energy creating new fracture surfaces in the rock mass; and
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Ripping
❖ Mechanical breakage is possible where the rock mass is already
fractured extensively (usually by inherent planes of weakness in the
rock).
❖ Ripping, using a dozer fitted with a tooth at the rear, is the most
common method.
Secondary fragmentation
❖ If the primary fragmentation is inefficient and may not produce a
well graded rock pile suitable for immediate loading and crushing.
❖ Geological conditions or a need to limit the amount of explosives used (in
mitigating environmental impacts) may locally produce block sizes that
are too great to be handled and, in such circumstances, it is often
necessary to undertake secondary fragmentation.
❖ This can be achieved using explosives, but such methods are normally
unacceptable on safety grounds as the blast can be uncontrolled and
result
in fly rock being generated.
❖ It also produces significant environmental impacts (mainly noise).
❖ Mechanical methods are generally favoured including:
a) The use of a steel drop ball; and
b) The use of a pneumatic/hydraulic impact breaker (rock pecker).
❖ Drop balls are popular, effective and relatively cheap, but suffer from
being slow and therefore inefficient where high production rates are
required.
❖ Safety is often an issue as hazards arising from flying rock pieces are
often associated with the method.
❖ Rock peckers have a number of advantages in secondary
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breaking applications.
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❖ They are efficient machines and can be used to accurately reduce block
sizes in the rock pile (see Plate 5). In addition, they can also be used in
other duties in the quarry, principally in scaling faces (to push off large
hanging blocks that may pose safety hazards).
❖ Each has advantages and disadvantages, and selection will depend on:
a) Required production rate;
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b) Rock type;
c) Geometry of quarry faces;
d) Geometry of the rock pile;
e) Grading of the rock pile; and
f) The type of haulage plant to be used.
Mineral transport
❖ As for sand and gravel operations, the basic haulage methods
available within hard rock quarries include use of conveyors or dump
trucks.
❖ Each has some advantages and disadvantages and design
implications arising from their selection will be considered below.
Conveyors
❖ Unlike sand and gravel deposits, where particle size distributions are
usually relatively narrow, the broken rock produced within a hard rock
quarry tends to have a wide range of particle sizes.
❖ This may preclude the use of conveyors as the primary transport
method from the working face to the processing plant.
❖ Conveyors work best with a restricted range of sizes to allow the
most economic sizing and speed of belts.
❖ In addition, within hard rock quarries greater flexibility and access
to working faces is normally required.
❖ Rock may be produced from several faces at any stage of the operation,
and while it may be possible for trucks to haul to a central conveyor, it is
normal practice for the excavation plant to load directly to a conveyor feed
hopper to minimize costs.
❖ Conveyors therefore offer relatively little flexibility, particularly where
working space is restricted and the conveyor requires frequent
relocation.
❖ Some of these problems may be overcome if the primary crusher
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Ripping Equipment
❖ There are basically two types of
rippers:
i. the pull- (or tow-) type ripper and
ii. the integral bulldozer-mounted ripper.
❖ In rock excavation, a bulldozer-mounted ripper works better than a
pull- type ripper because it can exert greater downward pressure.
❖ Rippers also come in single- and multi-toothed configurations.
❖ Single-toothed rippers are used for difficult ripping work, where
maximum ripping depth is required and/or the material is dense.
❖ Multi-toothed rippers, which can use up to five teeth, are used for
softer ground or for secondary purposes such as breaking up already
ripped ground.
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Figure 22. Photo. Typical hinge- or radial-style ripper (Nichols and Day 2005).
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Figure 24. Photo. A hydraulic hammer sculpting a rock face (the material to be
removed has been outlined with common marking paint).
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❖ After breaking, the excavated slope can be configured to look like a part
of the natural landscape, with the addition of boulders and topsoil and
reseeding with native vegetation as Figure 26 shows.
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Drilling Equipment
❖ Drilling horizontal holes is accomplished using a rig with a boom-mounted
drill guide (generally a track rig) that has the ability to rotate the drill
guide into a horizontal position and drill.
❖ Vertical and angled holes are bored using a down hole drilling rig or a
track drilling rig.
❖ Drilling with a down hole rig is best suited for vertical or near-
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Figure 19. Photo. Common track drill used to advance vertical blast holes.
Explosives
❖ The type of explosive used in any project depends on the hardness and
structural characteristics of the rock and the overall geometry of the
cut (burden, depth, and width).
❖ There are numerous types of explosives, and for each type there are
several different concentrations and mixtures.
❖ Properties to be considered when selecting an explosive include its
sensitivity, density, strength, water resistance, fumes, price, and
availability.
a) Dynamite
❖ Dynamite is the best known and most widely used explosive.
❖ It is classified according to its percentage by weight of
nitroglycerin (percentages range from 15 to 60%).
❖ Strength does not increase linearly with proportion, however.
12
❖ For example, 60% dynamite is about 1.5 times stronger than 20% dynamite.
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❖ However, the higher price of the slurry may offset the cost savings of
Page
Drilling Methods
❖ Blast holes are drilled at various orientations, from vertical
through horizontal.
❖ To create vertical holes, which are used almost exclusively in
production blasting, rock slope excavation uses two types of drilling:
down hole and step drilling.
❖ Horizontal drilling is used for both production and controlled
blasting because of limited drill rig access or geometry
requirements.
❖ Angled drilling can be performed as determined by slope face
angle requirements.
in Figure 14.
Page
Excavation plant.
i. Tracked bulldozer
ii. Common track drill
iii. A hydraulic hammer
iv. A typical hinge or radial-style ripper
v. Tippers
vi. Dumper trucks
vii. Stone cutting saws
viii. Hydraulic back-actor
12
substances
Page
❖ Road side safety banks or barriers are essential safety features at quarries.
Page
❖ A risk assessment has to be carried out and its results should be included
in the plan.
❖ There are various guidelines for carrying out risk assessments at quarries:
a) The Safety and Health Commission for the Mining and other
Extractive Industries published a set of guidelines, as did Safe
Maintenance –
Quarrying Sector
b) European Agency for Safety and Health at Work .
c) The statutory accident insurance institution for the quarrying industry
in Germany (Steinbruchs Berufsgenossenschaft)
appointed to perform each task and that they are given enough time to
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Work as planned
Final check
❖ When a maintenance task has been completed, workers need to
check whether they have left the item in a safe and functioning
condition.
❖ The functional capability of the plant, machines or equipment has to
be tested and all protective guards and mechanisms have to be
reinstated.
13
❖ The maintenance task is finished once the work is signed out and the
Page
DAMS
❖ Flood control.
❖ Dams such as the Black water Dam of Webster, New Hampshire and the
Delta Works are created with flood control in mind.[54]
❖ Water diversion
❖ A typically small dam is used to divert water for irrigation, power
13
❖ Land reclamation
❖ Navigation
❖ Dams create deep reservoirs and can also vary the flow of water
downstream.
❖ This can in return affect upstream and downstream navigation by
altering the river's depth.
❖ Deeper water increases or creates freedom of movement for water vessels.
❖ Large dams can serve this purpose but most often weirs and locks are used.
❖ For example, the Itaipu Dam on the Paraná River in South America
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B.Site Selection
(a) Stream narrowing or good topographical location along the path of river.
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❖ One of the best places for building a dam is a narrow part of a deep
river valley; the valley sides can then act as natural walls.
❖ The primary function of the dam's structure is to fill the gap in the
natural reservoir line left by the stream channel.
❖ The sites are usually those where the gap becomes a minimum for
the required storage capacity.
❖ The most economical arrangement is often a composite structure such as
a masonry dam flanked by earth embankments.
❖ The current use of the land to be flooded should be dispensable.
❖ The rock structure on which the dam will be constructed should be strong
enough to sustain the weight of dam and water stored in the dam.
❖ The rock structure should be able to sustain all the visible and
invisible forces.
❖ The rock structure should be stable and there should be least occurrence
of the earthquakes in the region.
❖ The rock structure should not allow the seepage of water and it should
be waterproof.
14Page
(e) The criteria set forth for the spillway, powerhouse, and the other
project appurtenances will play an important role in site selection.
❖ The relationship and adaptability of these features to the
project alignment will need evaluation along with associated
costs.
(g) The method or scheme of diverting flows around or through the dam
site during construction is an important consideration to the economy of
the dam.
❖ A concrete gravity dam offers major advantages and potential cost
savings by providing the option of diversion through alternate
construction blocks, and lowers risk and delay if overtopping
should occur.
Geological studies:
❖ This is carried out to collect data regarding:
i. Geological features, folds, faults, fissures etc their nature
and extent.
ii. Water tightness of the reservoir basin
iii. Existing and potential slide area
iv. Assessment of valuable minerals in reservoir area
v. Ground water condition
vi. Seismic conditions etc.
Foundation Studies:
Meteorological studies:
Hydrological Studies:
❖ Gauge and discharge observation, past flood, hydrographs to fix
spillway capacity, rain fall runoff correlation studies etc.
a. Loss of storage capacity by silting is a very vital issue for determining the
useful life of the reservoir.
b. Sediment observation shall be carried for 3 years for suspended load, bed
load and natural soil conditions including catchment characteristics from
point of erosion.
❖ Ground water investigations and permeability testing are necessary for
several reasons. These investigations provide the basis for design of
any dewatering systems required during construction.
14
❖ They also provide the data to evaluate the reservoir’s capability to impound
Page
water and to design seepage and uplift control required in the foundation
beneath the dam and in the abutments.
❖ These data also provide the basis for making assumptions of uplift on
rock wedges.
CLASSIFICATION OF DAMS
1. Based on Function Served
i. Storage dams
ii. Detention dams
iii. Diversion dams
iv. Debris dams
v. Coffer dams - a temp dam constructed for facilitating construction. It is
an enclosure constructed around a site to exclude water so that the
construction can be done in dry.
2. Based on Materials of Construction
i. Masonry dam
ii. Concrete dam
iii. Earth dam
iv. Rock fill dam
v. Timber dam
vi. Steel dam
vii. Combined concrete-cum-earth dam
viii. Composite dam.
14
3. Based on Rigidity
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❖ In a gravity dam, the force that holds the dam in place against the push
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from the water is Earth's gravity pulling down on the mass of the dam.
[39]
v. Are specially suited to such areas where there is very heavy downpour.
The slopes of the earth dams might be washed away in such an area.
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constant supervision.
v. Sluices cannot be provided in a high earth dam to remove slit.
vi. Fails suddenly without any sign of imminent failure. A sudden failure
causes havoc and untold miseries.
❖ A dry rubble cushion is placed between the rock fill and the membrane for
the distribution of water load and for providing a support to the
membrane.
❖ Side slopes of rock fill are usually kept equal to the angle of repose of rock
(1.4:1 or 1.3:1).Rock fill dams are quite economical when a large quantity
of rock is easily available near the site.
❖ The flexible properties of the asphalt make such dams especially suited
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in earthquake regions.[41]
v. Can better withstand the shocks due to earthquake than earth dams.
vi. can be constructed even in adverse climates
of sound rock.[38]
❖ The safety of an arch dam is dependent on the strength of the side wall
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abutments, hence not only should the arch be well seated on the side
walls but also the character of the rock should be carefully inspected.
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V. Buttress dams
❖ Buttress dams are of three types:
a) Deck type,
b) Multiple arch-type, and
15
c) Massive-head type.
❖ A deck type buttress dam consists of a sloping deck supported by
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16Page
Dams, ICOLD) define large dams as higher than 15 meters and major dams
as over 150 meters in height.[44]
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❖ The Report of the World Commission on Dams also includes in the large
category, dams, such as barrages, which are between 5 and 15 meters
high with a reservoir capacity of more than 3 million cubic meters.[40]
❖ The tallest dam in the world is the 300-meter-high Nurek Dam in Tajikistan.
[45]
b)Weir
❖ A weir (also sometimes called an overflow dam) is a type of small
overflow dam that is often used within a river channel to create an
impoundment lake for water abstraction purposes and which can also be
used for flow measurement or retardation.
c) Check dam
❖ A check dam is a small dam designed to reduce flow velocity and control
16
soil erosion. Conversely, a wing dam is a structure that only partly restricts
a waterway, creating a faster channel that resists the accumulation of
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sediment.
d)Dry dam
❖ A dry dam also known as a flood retarding structure, is a dam designed
to control flooding.
e)Diversionary dam
❖ A diversionary dam is a structure designed to divert all or a portion of
the flow of a river from its natural course.
❖ The water may be redirected into a canal or tunnel for irrigation
and/or hydroelectric power production.
f) Underground dam
❖ Underground dams are used to trap groundwater and store all or most of
it below the surface for extended use in a localized area.
❖ In some cases they are also built to prevent saltwater from intruding into
a freshwater aquifer.
❖ Underground dams are typically constructed in areas where water
resources are minimal and need to be efficiently stored, such as in
deserts and on islands like the Fukuzato Dam in Okinawa, Japan.
❖ They are most common in northeastern Africa and the arid areas of
Brazil while also being used in the southwestern United States, Mexico,
India, Germany, Italy, Greece, France and Japan.[46]
❖ There are two types of underground dams: a sub-surface and a
sand- storage dam.
❖ A sub-surface dam is built across an aquifer or drainage route from
an impervious layer (such as solid bedrock) up to just below the
surface.
❖ They can be constructed of a variety of materials to include bricks,
stones, concrete, steel or PVC.
16
❖ Once built, the water stored behind the dam raises the water table and
Page
❖ A steel dam is a type of dam briefly experimented with in around the start
of the 20th century which uses steel plating (at an angle) and load bearing
beams as the structure.
❖ Intended as permanent structures, steel dams were an (arguably failed)
experiment to determine if a construction technique could be devised that
16
b)Timber dams
❖ Timber dams were widely used in the early part of the industrial
revolution and in frontier areas due to ease and speed of construction.
❖ Rarely built in modern times because of relatively short lifespan and
limited height to which they can be built, timber dams must be kept
constantly wet in order to maintain their water retention properties and
limit deterioration by rot, similar to a barrel.
❖ The locations where timber dams are most economical to build are
those where timber is plentiful, cement is costly or difficult to transport,
and either a low head diversion dam is required or longevity is not an
issue.
❖ Timber dams were once numerous, especially in the North American
west, but most have failed, been hidden under earth embankments or
been replaced with entirely new structures.
❖ Two common variations of timber dams were the crib and the plank.
❖ Timber crib dams were erected of heavy timbers or dressed logs in
the manner of a log house and the interior filled with earth or rubble.
❖ The heavy crib structure supported the dam's face and the weight of
the water.
❖ Splash dams were timber crib dams used to help float logs downstream
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
16
Other types
a)Cofferdams
b)Natural dams
❖ Dams can also be created by natural geological forces.
16
❖ Volcanic dams are formed when lava flows, often basaltic, intercept
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they are a renewable electricity source; and most other power generation
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d)Spillways
❖ A spillway is a section of a dam designed to pass water from the
upstream side of a dam to the downstream side.
❖ Many spillways have floodgates designed to control the flow through
the spillway.
❖ Types of spillway include: A service spillway or primary spillway
passes normal flow.
❖ An auxiliary spillway releases flow in excess of the capacity of the
service spillway.
❖ An emergency spillway is designed for extreme conditions, such as
17
2
1
3) Involuntary Displacement
❖ Involuntary displacement of people is often the main adverse social impact
of hydroelectric projects. It can also have important environmental
implications, such as with the conversion of natural habitats to
accommodate resettled rural populations.
❖ For physical displacement, the main mitigation measure is the
resettlement of displaced populations, including new housing, replacement
lands, and other material assistance, as needed.
❖ Success usually requires consultation and participatory decision making
by both the resettled and host populations (mandatory for World Bank–
supported resettlement).
17
water quality, aquatic weed and disease vector control, irrigation and other
human uses of water, downriver flood protection, recreation (such as
whitewater boating), and, of course, power generation.
❖ From an ecological standpoint, the ideal water release pattern would usually
closely mimic the natural flooding regime (although this may not be feasible
for densely settled floodplains where flood protection is a high priority).
6) Water-Related Diseases
❖ Some infectious diseases can spread around hydroelectric
reservoirs, particularly in warm climates and densely populated
areas.
❖ Some diseases (such as malaria and schistosomiasis) are borne by water-
dependent disease vectors (mosquitoes and aquatic snails); others (such as
dysentery, cholera, and hepatitis A) are spread by contaminated water, which
frequently becomes worse in stagnant reservoirs than it was in fast-flowing
rivers.
❖ Corresponding public health measures should include preventive
measures (such as awareness campaigns and window screens), monitoring
of vectors
and disease outbreaks, vector control, and clinical treatment of disease cases,
as needed.
❖ Control of floating aquatic weeds (see below) near populated areas can
reduce mosquito-borne disease risks.
❖ The introduction of surface irrigation from canals and tanks has resulted in
the rise in the groundwater-table, continuous rise in water-logging and
land salinization.
❖ Irrigation water unlike rainwater contains considerable amount of salt
in the solution.
❖ Salts like potassium sulphate or nitrates can be of direct benefit to plants,
others such as calcium sulphate can contribute to improve the soil
structure. On the other hand, salts such as sodium chloride, or
compounds containing boron may have detrimental effects on the soil or
the plant.
❖ Water-logging is caused when the salt of the soil comes up to the
surface due to the rise of sub-soil water-level.
❖ Dams built for irrigation purposes bring water-logging in two ways.
a) Firstly, canals intersect drainage lines and thus cause rain or flood water
to be held up and
b) Secondly, reservoirs and canals cause their own water to seep until
water reaches the root zone level.
❖ If the sub-soil outflow is not enough to balance the inflow, the root
18
zone level rises, and all the salt of the soil comes to the surface and
makes the land unfit for the cultivation.
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❖ In Uttar Pradesh and Punjab due to water seepage and in the case of Karz-
Page
kum canal in Russia, about 43 per cent water gets lost through seepage
and converts large areas unfit for cultivation.
❖ According to a soil survey report in Egypt, about 50 per cent of irrigated
land has deteriorated to the extent that they are low, medium or poor
soils.
❖ Many of the developing countries are suffering from water logging
and salinization of land.
❖ In the name of development, more and more irrigation projects are
coming up and making agricultural land infertile.
Downloaded by Vincent Ngetich ([email protected])
❖ Excessive irrigation does not leave land even that much productive
as before irrigation.
❖ For a short period, irrigation increases production remarkably and then it
makes land worse off. Generally, developing countries face this problem
as water management is not proper.
2. Health Hazards
natural hazards.
❖ The life expectancy of reservoirs also causes environmental imbalance
such as delta, erosion, river bed erosion and non-availability of food for
fish for want of suitable vegetation in the offshore region.
4. Erratic Mud
1. Failure Risk
2. Increasing Hazard
3. Funding
4. Regulation
5. Emergency Preparedness
6. Public Awareness
❖ Driving every other issue and all activities within the dam safety
community is the risk of dam failure.
❖ Although the majority of dams in the U.S. have responsible owners and
are properly maintained, still many dams fail every year.
❖ From 2005 to 2009, the States reported 132 dam failures. A life was
recently lost in New Hampshire as a result of a dam failure.
❖ In 2006, seven people were killed in Hawaii when a deficient dam
broke. Dam and downstream repair costs resulting from failures in 23
states
reporting in one recent year totaled $54.3 million.
❖ Dam failures are most likely to happen for one of five reasons:
$53.69 billion.
❖ High-hazard potential dams are estimated at approximately $18.2
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❖ States are responsible for oversight of the vast majority of dams listed in
the National Inventory of Dams (77% in 2012).
❖ Although most states have legislative authority to carry out a
comprehensive dam safety program, many are lacking in specific
areas.
❖ Some states are unable, by specific language in their law, to regulate
certain types of dams, allowing these structures to fall between the
regulatory cracks.
❖ Other states have limited ability to enforce the law. In some states,
officials have no recourse if dam owners do not carry out safety repairs
ordered by
the state.
❖ Many states are simply under-resourced for carrying out the letter of
the law.
❖ State budgets for dam safety range from $0 (Alabama) to $11
million (California).
❖ But the average annual state dam safety budget is about $688,000.
The average number of regulated dams per state exceeds 1700.
❖ The average number of dam inspectors per state is about eight; this
means that each dam inspector is responsible for overseeing the safety of
more than 200 existing dams, plus the additional responsibilities of
overseeing new construction.
❖ There is, therefore, a serious need, in almost every state, to
pump additional state resources into these programs.
❖ Maps are a way of showing a part of the Earth's surface on a flat piece
19
of paper.
Page
❖ Maps are flat but they are made to represent an area that is on a
sphere, Earth.
❖ Geological maps illustrate the nature, extent and relative age of rock
types to be found in a district.
❖ Solid geology maps show the 'solid' (bedrock) geology only. They show
19
Features of a map
❖ The key usually shows a small picture of each of the symbols used on
the map, along with a written description of the meaning of each
symbol.
19Page
❖ When scaling down a map, every part of the map is scaled by the
same amount.
❖ Because the Earth is round, and maps are flat, it is impossible to create
a map with a perfect scale.
❖ Some parts of the map will be too large, while others will be too small.
❖ The top point is called north and the point at the bottom is south.
❖ Latitude gives a north and south direction and longitude gives an east
and west direction.
1e
g
a)General-purpose maps
❖ General-purpose maps provide many types of information on one map.
❖ Most atlas maps, wall maps, and road maps fall into this category.
b)Road Map
19Page
❖ One of the most commonly used types of maps is the road map, mainly
used for navigation. This kind of map shows road networks of a specific
area including major and minor highways and smaller roads.
❖ Major highways are usually shown as wide red lines. Smaller ones are less
prominent with lighter colors.
❖ Places of interests such as airports, parks, monuments, and city locations
are depicted here as well.
❖ Street maps illustrate smaller areas such as towns and cities.
19Page
Itineraria
❖ An alternative to, and in many ways the precursor of the road map, was the
itinerarium, a listing of towns and other stops, with intervening distances.
❖ Road maps can also vary in complexity, from a simple schematic map used
to show how to get to a single specific destination (such as a business), to a
complex electronic map, which may layer together many different types of
maps and information – such as a road map plotted over a topographical
3D satellite image (a viewing mode frequently used within Google Earth).
❖ Atlases may cover a number of discrete regions, such as all of the states or
provinces of a given nation, or a single continuous region in high detail
split across several pages.
❖ These indexes give the location of the feature on the map via a
grid reference.
c) Physical Map
❖ Simply put, a physical map shows the landscapes and features of a particular
area.
❖ Bodies of water such as lakes, rivers, and the sea are always shown in blue.
❖ Land features are colored depending on their elevation. In general, low-lying
terrain such as plains and coastal areas are green.
❖ Higher elevations such as hills, plateaus, and mountains range from
orange to brown depending on how high they are.
❖ Illustrate the physical features of an area, such as the mountains,
rivers and lakes.
❖ The water is usually shown in blue.
❖ Colors are used to show relief—differences in land elevations.
❖ Green is usually used at lower elevations, and orange or brown
show higher elevations.
20Page
❖ Many hikers use topographic maps, especially in areas where there are
no roads with signs.
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❖ Instead, they show state and national boundaries and capital and
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major cities.
❖ A capital city is usually marked with a star within a circle.
7
0
2e
g
A surface weather analysis for the United States on October 21, 2006.
❖ Such maps have been in use since the mid-19th century and are used
for research and weather forecasting purposes.
stream is located.
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❖ Use of constant pressure charts at the 700 and 500 hPa level can
indicate tropical cyclone motion.
❖ Special weather maps in aviation show areas of icing and turbulence for
the other.
h)Thematic Map
❖ A thematic map is used to show a specific theme or topic related to an area.
❖ It could portray virtually any kind of information from average rainfall
distribution, infant mortality rates, population density, and membership
to political organizations.
❖ Features such as terrain variations, political boundaries, and highways
are normally omitted.
❖ When they are included, they are used strictly for reference.
❖ Maps are objects seen by many people almost every day.
❖ It seems simple but few really know their importance.
❖ Different types of maps are used for a wide range of purposes for reference.
❖ They are important tools for everyone from the average Joe to university
professors and scientific researchers.
❖ Maps make sense of otherwise confusing data and help provide a
better understanding of the world.
9
0
2e
g
Edmond Halley's New and Correct Chart Shewing the Variations of the Compass
(1701), the first chart to show lines of equal magnetic variation.
❖ One of the earliest thematic maps was a map entitled Designatio orbis
christiani (1607) by Jodocus Hondius showing the dispersion of major
religions, using map symbols in the French edition of his Atlas Minor
(1607).
[5]
❖ This was soon followed by a thematic globe (in the form of a six-gore map)
showing the same subject, using Hondius' symbols, by Franciscus Haraeus,
entitled: Novus typus orbis ipsus globus, ex Analemmate Ptolomaei
diductus (1614)[6]
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Geologic map
units.
❖ It is not always possible to properly show this when the strata are
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b) Photomap.
shows elevations and contour in meters and the air version shows them
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in feet.
❖ Layer (elevation) tinting and relief shading are added as an aid to
interpolating relief. Both versions emphasize airlanding facilities (shown
in
purple), but the air version has additional symbols to identify aids and
obstructions to air navigation.
e) Terrain Model.
g) Special Maps.
• Terrain features.
• Drainage characteristics.
• Vegetation.
• Climate.
• Coasts and landing beaches.
• Roads and bridges.
• Railroads.
• Airfields.
• Urban areas.
• Electric power.
• Fuels.
• Surface water resources.
• Ground water resources.
• Natural construction materials.
• Cross-country movements.
• Suitability for airfield construction.
• Airborne operations.
maps and can produce its own maps based upon intelligence.
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h) Foreign Maps.
❖ Foreign maps have been compiled by nations other than our own.
❖ When they must be used, the marginal information and grids are
changed to conform to our standards, if time permits.
i) Atlases.
j) Geographic Maps.
❖ Tourist road maps are maps of a region in which the main means
of transportation and areas of interest are shown.
l) City/Utility Maps.
m) Field Sketches.
n) Aerial Photographs.
Types of strata
and sediments.
1
2e
g
Features
❖ Outcrops do not cover the majority of the Earth's land surface because in
most places the bedrock or superficial deposits are covered by a mantle
of soil and vegetation and cannot be seen or examined closely.
❖ However in places where the overlying cover is removed through
erosion or tectonic uplift, the rock may be exposed, or crop out.
❖ Such exposure will happen most frequently in areas where erosion is rapid
and exceeds the weathering rate such as on steep hillsides, mountain
ridges and tops, river banks, and tectonically active areas.
22
Examples
❖ On Ordnance Survey maps in Great Britain, cliffs are distinguished from
outcrops: cliffs have a continuous line along the top edge with lines
22
bare rock.
❖ An outcrop example in California is the Vasquez Rocks, familiar from
location shooting use in many films, composed of uplifted sandstone.[2]
[3]
❖ Rock which occurs at any given place on the earth is called that location's
bedrock.
❖ It is always a challenge to make a geologic map when all you have is float
to work with, because it is often difficult to know how far the pieces have
been moved since they were broken off by weathering processes.
❖ There are places where it is impossible to determine for sure that the
22
❖ We call this "I don't think it's float, but I'm not convinced that it's
attached" material subcrop.
❖ The term subcrop is also applied to material which has probably broken
off, but has not been moved from its original location.
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