Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Abstract For centuries back, man has searched for and utilised geological material resources for many different purposes. These efforts have left many, large wounds or “eyesores” in bedrock and soil strata, that have destroyed the appearance of the original landscape, and which now often serve as waste dumps and scrap sites. Worked-out gravel and sand pits, as well as extinct quarries and open-pit mineral mines, can extend over wide areas of land and reach considerable depths. Depths which subsequently have become particularly attractive as waste storage sites, especially when these offer short transport distances to suppliers in major, built-up areas and communities. This paper gives some examples as to how Stockholm has replaced worked-out overburden and rock masses from eskers and rock strata with waste masses, simultaneously restoring land formation into its original condition through landscaping. Specific engineering-geological survey methods, control systems, as well as risk and sequel analyses, relating to long-term interplay between rock, soil strata and groundwater, with particular consideration to surface construction and property development planning and isostatic uplift, will be presented.
Abstract For centuries back, man has searched for and utilised geological material resources for many different purposes. These efforts have left many, large wounds or “eyesores” in bedrock and soil strata, that have destroyed the appearance of the original landscape, and which now often serve as waste dumps and scrap sites. Worked-out gravel and sand pits, as well as extinct quarries and open-pit mineral mines, can extend over wide areas of land and reach considerable depths. Depths which subsequently have become particularly attractive as waste storage sites, especially when these offer short transport distances to suppliers in major, built-up areas and communities. This paper gives some examples as to how Stockholm has replaced worked-out overburden and rock masses from eskers and rock strata with waste masses, simultaneously restoring land formation into its original condition through landscaping. Specific engineering-geological survey methods, control systems, as well as risk and sequel analyses, relating to long-term interplay between rock, soil strata and groundwater, with particular consideration to surface construction and property development planning and isostatic uplift, will be presented.
Landscaping with waste
Morfeldt, Carl-Olof (Autor:in)
Engineering Geology ; 34 ; 135-143
01.12.1992
9 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1993
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Online Contents | 1993