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Soft-sediment deformation during thawing of ice-rich frozen soils: results of scaled centrifuge modelling experiments
Authors:Charles Harris  Julian Murton  & Michael C R Davies
Institution:Department of Earth Sciences, Cardiff University, Main Building, Cardiff CF10 3YE, UK (E-mail:;), School of Chemistry, Physics and Environmental Science, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9Q J, UK,;Department of Civil Engineering, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, UK
Abstract:The origin of periglacial involutions remains uncertain, largely because of the difficulties of field monitoring in modern permafrost regions. This paper describes an alternative approach, in which process studies are based on scaled centrifuge modelling of thawing ice-rich soils. Centrifuge scaling laws allow similitude in self-weight stresses between the model scale and the prototype (field) scale to be achieved. In these experiments, 120- to 130-mm-thick frozen models comprising a sand unit overlying ice-rich kaolinite clay (three models) or ice-rich silt (one model) were thawed under an acceleration of 20 gravities. The models were therefore equivalent to 2·4–2·6 m of frozen sediments (permafrost) at the prototype scale. Temperature profiles and porewater pressures during the thawing of each model are described. Porewater pressures significantly in excess of hydrostatic were not observed in the sand/silt model. In the sand/clay models, however, excess pressures developed rapidly after thawing, and observed fluctuations in pressure were interpreted as water-escape events. After thawing, careful sectioning of the models revealed small-scale deformation structures at the clay–sand interface, resulting from loading of the upper sand layer into very soft fluid-like clay and injection of clay upwards into the base of the sand. It is concluded that these experiments provide analogues for some Pleistocene involutions. Such involutions therefore mark phases of permafrost degradation when high porewater pressures caused loading and injection along sedimentary boundaries.
Keywords:Centrifuge modelling  involutions  periglacial  water escape
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