Title of article :
Recent ground subsidence at Crown Road, Tauhara and its probable causes
Author/Authors :
Bromley، نويسنده , , Chris J. and Currie، نويسنده , , Steve and Manville، نويسنده , , Vern R. and Rosenberg، نويسنده , , Michael D.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
11
From page :
181
To page :
191
Abstract :
A localised ground subsidence anomaly at Crown Road, Taupo, within the Tauhara field of the Wairakei–Tauhara geothermal system, has been subjected to intense scrutiny because of its relatively recent onset and proximity to urban areas. Over a period of 20 years a maximum of 0.63 m of subsidence has accumulated. Uncertainties regarding its cause remain, but the evidence now strongly favours a relatively shallow (about 50 m depth) origin, compared with other geothermal subsidence bowls at Wairakei, Tauhara and Ohaaki. Declining water levels in a shallow boiling aquifer are considered to be the principal driving mechanism at Crown Road. The source of the subsidence is an anomalously compressible formation of intensely altered ignimbrite found at the base of a buried hydrothermal eruption deposit. This formation is dominated by soft kaolinite and smectite-illite clays of high plasticity and water content, resulting from alteration of highly vesiculated pumice, and is capped by a thin hardpan of silicified pyroclastic material, characterised by vuggy macro-porosity, at about 33 m depth. During initiation of the subsidence event, this hardpan may have failed in shear mode around the edges of a buried eruption crater, allowing the overburden to fully load the underlying compressible clays.
Keywords :
groundwater , New Zealand , Geothermal , Compressibility , ground subsidence , Thermal clay alteration
Journal title :
Geothermics
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Geothermics
Record number :
2367873
Link To Document :
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