A Study on the Improvement Measures of Field Investigation Methods of Quality evaluation in Community Service Investment Projects

Author(s):  
Min-Jung Kim ◽  
Yun-Jeong Kim
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuntao Zhou ◽  
Xiaoyan Zhao ◽  
Jiajia Zhang ◽  
Minghui Meng

Abstract Identification of the locking segments is crucial for assessing the potential runout risk and the overall stability of the high-locality landslide. However, during the field investigation, it is difficult to identify the locking segments before landslide failure due to their concealment. Tizicao landslide, a high-locality landslide, is used as the field example for the locking segments identification analysis in this study. Based on the geomorphology and spatial-temporal deformation in the landslide, the identification characteristics of the locking segments of the landslide are analyzed macroscopically, and the location and area of the locking segments are determined based on the analysis results. The field investigation methods are used to verify the identification results, including the monitoring of surface and deep displacement, geological borehole drilling, and oblique photography using drones. The results show that the locking segment of the Tizicao landslide lies at the southern slope toe, which covers an area of about 4.69 × 104 m2, accounting for 15.2% of the total area of the landslide. The significant different developmental characteristics are observed in respect of the surface displacement, deep displacement, surface crack, and sliding zone soil between locking and non-locking segments. It is concluded that the formation and evolution of the locking rock masses in the Tizicao landslide are closely related to the development of local folds and S-shaped river valleys, differential unloading due to river cutting, and earthquake-induced damage to rock masses in the landslide area.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marshall Lew ◽  
Kenneth H. Stokoe II ◽  
Craig A. Davis ◽  
Hari Ponnaboyina ◽  
Martin B. Hudson ◽  
...  

1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Ladanyi

Within the scope of a study on the use in frozen soils of some geotechnical field investigation methods, a series of deep, static and quasi-static, penetration tests was carried out in July 1974 at a permafrost site near Thompson, Manitoba. The field study included stress – and penetration rate – controlled tests, performed with an electric penetrometer, as well as several short-term and stage-loaded pressuremeter tests. The study shows that a static penetration test can furnish valuable information on the time-dependent strength of frozen soil, provided the test is conducted either with a very accurate control of the penetration rate, or as a stage-loaded test. It is considered that a comparison of frozen soil strengths deduced from such a test, with those determined by pressuremeter tests or triaxial compression tests, can only be made at comparable strain rates. An attempt was, therefore, made in the paper to find a relationship between the penetration rate and an equivalent time to failure for the soil surrounding the penetrometer tip, which enabled this comparison to be carried out.


1998 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 271-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah Steinberg ◽  
Briony R. Nicholls ◽  
Elizabeth A. Sykes ◽  
N. LeBoutillier ◽  
Nerina Ramlakhan ◽  
...  

Mood improvement immediately after a single bout of exercise is well documented, but less is known about successive and longer term effects. In a “real-life” field investigation, four kinds of exercise class (Beginners, Advanced, Body Funk and Callanetics) met once a week for up to 7 weeks. Before and after each class the members assessed how they felt by completing a questionnaire listing equal numbers of “positive” and “negative” mood words. Subjects who had attended at least five times were included in the analysis, which led to groups consisting of 18, 20, 16, and 16 subjects, respectively. All four kinds of exercise significantly increased positive and decreased negative feelings, and this result was surprisingly consistent in successive weeks. However, exercise seemed to have a much greater effect on positive than on negative moods. The favorable moods induced by each class seemed to have worn off by the following week, to be reinstated by the class itself. In the Callanetics class, positive mood also improved significantly over time. The Callanetics class involved “slower,” more demanding exercises, not always done to music. The Callanetics and Advanced classes also showed significantly greater preexercise negative moods in the first three sessions. However, these differences disappeared following exercise. Possibly, these two groups had become more “tolerant” to the mood-enhancing effects of physical exercise; this may be in part have been due to “exercise addiction.”


2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger N. Reeb ◽  
Mike Smith ◽  
Ron Reigelsperger ◽  
Michelle Jessup

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