Interpreting Surface-wave Data for a Site with Shallow Bedrock

Author:

Casto Daniel W.123,Luke Barbara123,Calderón-Macías Carlos123,Kaufmann Ronald123

Affiliation:

1. Technos, Inc., 10430 NW 31st Terrace, Doral, Fl. 33172

2. Applied Geophysics Center, University of Nevada Las Vegas, 4505 Maryland Parkway, Box 454015, Las Vegas, Nv. 89154

3. ION-GX Technology, 2105 Cit West Blvd., Building III, Suite 900, Houston, Tex. 77042

Abstract

The inversion of dispersive Rayleigh-wave data has been shown to be successful in providing reliable estimated shear-wave velocities within unconsolidated materials in the near surface. However, in a case where the multi-channel analysis of surface waves method was applied to a site consisting of clay residuum overlying basalt bedrock, inversion for the fundamental-mode Rayleigh wave resulted in shear-wave velocities within the rock that are less than half of expected values. Forward modeling reveals that the fundamental-mode dispersion curve is hardly sensitive to bedrock velocity perturbations over a practical range of wavelengths, leading to poorly constrained solutions. Standard surface-wave methods can fail because of a shortage of phase-velocity estimates at the low frequencies that are necessary to properly constrain shear-wave velocities at depth. The commonly used guideline that maximum investigation depth is roughly half of the largest recorded wavelength can be misleading. Data at much lower frequencies (i.e., longer wavelengths) than typically acquired might be required to obtain a meaningful shear-wave velocity profile, particularly for a site with a high-velocity half-space beneath a low-velocity layer. For such cases, layer geometry appears to have a large impact on inversion results. Consequently, Rayleigh-wave methods can be effective in determining depth to bedrock in simple, layered geologies (e.g., soft sediment over hard bedrock) when independent information of shear-wave velocity is available. Analysis techniques that address higher modes of Rayleigh-wave propagation may be useful for more accurately resolving depth and velocity of a high-velocity half-space. In the studied case, higher modes can theoretically reach the asymptotic high-velocity limits within the range of recorded frequencies.

Publisher

Environmental and Engineering Geophysical Society

Subject

Geophysics,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Environmental Engineering

Reference21 articles.

1. Simulated annealing inversion of multimode Rayleigh wave dispersion curves for geological structure

2. Casto, D. W. , B. Luke, C. Calderón-Maćas, and R. Kaufmann, 2008, Considerations for interpreting surface wave data in sites with shallow bedrock: in Expanded Abstracts: 21st Annual Symposium on the Applications of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems (SAGEEP), 13 pp.

3. Delineating a shallow fault zone and dipping bedrock strata using multichannal analysis of surface waves with a land streamer

4. Kansas Geological Survey, 2006, SurfSeis v2.0 MASW: Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence, Kansas.

5. Inversion of Seismic Surface Wave Data to Resolve Complex Profiles

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