6 research outputs found

    Development of an enhanced CPT system for Dogger Bank

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    An enhanced seafloor CPT system has been developed to support completion of the soil investigation campaign for Dogger Bank. This enhanced system has a demonstrable and significant performance increase over standard seafloor CPT systems; capable of pushing through dense sand layers with qc>100 MPa and through tens of meters of very stiff clays. At Dogger Bank, this enhanced system has enabled CPT penetrations of more than 40 m below seafloor, in soils where standard systems could only average in the twenties. The system enhancement has been achieved through the application and adaption of techniques well known in the geotechnical industry (water lubrication and water injection), but which have never before been combined in an offshore seafloor CPT system. The performance of the enhanced CPT system has enabled a reliance on seafloor CPTs to acquire data to beyond monopile toe depths, therefore removing absolute reliance on boreholes to acquire data at turbine locations and facilitating the fast and efficient development of a geotechnical design basis.Development of an enhanced CPT system for Dogger BankpublishedVersio

    The evolution of the Dogger Bank, North Sea: a complex history of terrestrial, glacial and marine environmental change

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    This paper presents a summary of the results of a detailed multidisciplinary study of the near surface geology of the Dogger Bank in the southern central North Sea, forming part of a site investigation for a major windfarm development undertaken by the Forewind consortium. It has revealed that the Dogger Bank is internally complex rather than comprising a simple “layer cake” of the Quaternary sediments as previously thought. Regional and high-resolution seismic surveys have enabled a revised stratigraphic framework to be established for the upper part of this sequence which comprises the Eem (oldest), Dogger Bank, Bolders Bank formations and Botney Cut Formation (youngest), overlain by a typically thin Holocene sequence. Detailed mapping of key horizons identified on the high-resolution seismic profiles has led to the recognition of a series of buried palaeo-landsystems which are characterised by a range of features including; glacial, glacifluvial and fluvial channels, a large-scale glacitectonic thrust-moraine complex with intervening ice-marginal basins, a lacustrine basin and marine ravinement surfaces. Interpretation of these buried landscapes has enabled the development of an environmental change model to explain the evolution of the Dogger Bank. This evolution was driven by the complex interplay between climate change, ice sheet dynamics and sea level change associated with the growth and subsequent demise of the British and Irish and Fennoscandian ice sheets during the Weichselian glaciation. Following the decay of these ice sheets the Dogger Bank entered a period of significant climatic and environmental flux which saw a terrestrial landscape being progressively inundated as sea levels rose during the Holocene

    Engineering properties of low to medium overconsolidation ratio offshore clays

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    This paper presents a summary of the geotechnical engineering properties of low to medium overconsolidation ratio offshore inorganic clays derived from a high quality database. These properties, such as preconsolidation stress and undrained shear strength, are required for design of most offshore infrastructure and for assessment of offshore geohazards. The database was developed through a series of Joint Industry Projects using results from offshore site investigations performed worldwide. The key feature of the database is that it only contains results obtained using good to excellent quality samples that were tested using advanced laboratory procedures such as constant rate of strain consolidation and consolidated undrained triaxial and direct simple shear. A secondary objective of the paper was to examine common empirical correlations between index tests (e.g., water content, Atterberg limits) and soil design parameters using the new database. Such empirical correlations between simple and inexpensive index tests and more costly advanced laboratory tests can serve a valuable purpose in offshore infrastructure design. This is particularly the case for preliminary design at early stages of projects where little information is known about soil properties, for small projects with limited site characterization budgets, and international projects at locations where advanced laboratory tests performed to international standards are not available. The paper describes development of the database and presents summary results and plots for undrained shear strength, in situ stress state, and consolidation and flow parameters. Results from the empirical correlations investigated are presented and the paper concludes with recommendations on use of the data and correlations in practice. The recommendations are limited to clays of low to medium overconsolidation ratio and are not applicable to highly overconsolidated and desiccated clays. While the database primarily consists of offshore clays, the correlations presented should also be applicable to terrestrial clays.publishedVersio

    A Climatic Trigger for the Giant Troll Pockmark Field in the Northern North Sea

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    Pockmarks are seafloor craters usually formed during methane release on continental margins. However, the mechanisms behind their formation and dynamics remain elusive. Here we ,report detailed investigations on one of ,the World’s largest pockmark fields located in the Troll region in the northern North Sea. Seafloor investigations show that >7000 pockmarks are present in a∼600 km2 area. A similar density of pockmarks is likely present over a 15,000 km2 region outside our study area. Based on extensive monitoring, coring, geophysical and geochemical analyses, no indications of active gas seepage were found. Still, geochemical data from carbonate blocks collected from these pockmarks indicate a methanogenic origin linked to gas hydrate dissociation and past fluid venting at the seafloor. We have dated the carbonates using the U–Th method in order to constrain the pockmark formation. The carbonates gave an isochron age of 9.59±.38 ka, i.e. belonging to the initial Holocene. Moreover, radiocarbon dating of microfossils in the sediments inside the pockmarks is consistent with the ages derived from the carbonates. Based on pressure and temperature modelling, we show that the last deglaciation could have triggered dissociation of gas hydrates present in the region of the northern part of the Norwegian Channel, causing degassing of 0.26 Mt CH4/km2 at the seafloor. Our results stress the importance of external climatic forcing of the dynamics of the seafloor, and the role of the rapid warming following the Younger Dryas in pacing the marine gas hydrate reservoir
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