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Cross Hole Seismic Tests (M-7)
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Q: How does it work?
A:
A three-axis geophone is lowered
into a specially-prepared, cased borehole and excited with a hammer
source in a similar borehole nearby. This procedure is covered by
an ASTM guideline but has several variants. Invariant are
requirements to measure both P and S waves and to use a reversible
source to aid in the identification of the S arrivals.
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Q: What is the geologic
model?
A:
The geologic model is of rock materials
which are homogeneous, at least laterally, on the scale of the test.
Usually the boreholes are about ten feet apart. The standard calls
for three holes (one source and two receivers) but if geologic variation
is known to be small, two holes are an acceptable alternative. Another
variant is a downhole test where the source is left at the surface
and only one hole is used. Where homogeneity is geologically probable
or results are not critical, this variation can be cheaper.
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Q: What are the
requirements?
A: A
reversible source as mentioned above and a downhole survey of the
boreholes are required. Most drillers when challenged can drill quite
a straight hole, but a lateral deviation of a foot at depth inserts
a large error into the spacing measurement of about ten feet. The
completion of the borehole to the ASTM standard is probably the most
important part of the procedure.
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Q: What are the
pitfalls?
A: Not
measuring the borehole deviation makes the test almost meaningless.
Bad completion (loose casing, grout poured in from the top, etc.)
destroys the quality of the waveforms. Strong bedding with high-speed
stringers may mask low-velocity zones of interest especially if the
boreholes are placed far apart.
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Q: What logistics
are needed?
A:
After the holes are drilled, a crew of one person can make the
measurements. However, where several sites are to be measured, an
untrained second person can make the work more efficient.
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Q: What are the
deliverables?
A:
Deviation survey results, depth profiles of S and P wave velocities and
tables of the elastic constants (Young's modulus, shear modulus, Poisson's
ratio) based on client-supplied densities, and site maps with borehole
locations.
- More detailed information.
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