CHAPTER 5
SURFACE AND SLOPE PROTECTIVE MEASURES
5.1 Introduction
Properly designed slope protection and stabilization
has to include two components: a vegetational-biological and a mechanical-structural
component. For maximum effect, both components must be integrally planned
prior to road construction.
Properly designed and planted vegetative covers play
a significant role in preventing surface erosion and shallow mass failures.
The function of root systems of live plants on shallow soils on steep
slopes is that of a binder for individual soil particles or aggregates.
They act in several ways to increase slope stability: (1) they bond unstable
soil mantles to stable subsoils or substrata, (2) they provide a cover
of a laterally strong fine root systems close to the surface, and (3)
they provide localized centers of reinforcement in the vicinity of individual
trees where embedded stems act like a buttress pile or arch-abutment on
a slope.
The structural-mechanical component can consist of conventional
retaining walls, either the gravity or cantilever type, or a reinforced
earth structure. Structural-mechanical stabilization techniques are called
for in cases where the potential for deep-seated slope movement or high,
lateral earth stresses exists.
A simplified flow chart is shown in Figure 94 which indicates
the appropriate combination of methods to either maintain or achieve a
stable and erosion-free slope. Implicit in any slope stability discussion
is the effect of water and the importance of proper drainage. Mechanical
drainage structures, such as culverts, ditches, water bars, is discussed
in Chapter 4.3, 4.4, and 4.5. In addition to mechanical controls, however,
vegetation can provide a form of "biological" drainage through plant transpiration.
Root systems can effectively dewater soil mantles during their active
growing season, but often the periods of most danger from sloe failure
and erosion do not coincide with peak transpiration periods.
More detailed information concerning biotechnical slope
stabilization, the combination of vegetative and structural components
can be found in Gray and Leiser (1982), Volgman (1979) and Schiechtl (1978,
1980).
5.2 Surface Protection Measures
The simplest and most cost effective means of stabilizing bare soil surfaces
is through the use of vegetation or mulches. The objective of all surface
stabilization techniques is to establish, as rapidly as possible, a dense
vegetative cover to minimize available sources for sediment. Native plants
generally require less expense and maintenance as well as being visually
harmonious with the natural landscape. Many exotic species have been cultivated
specifically for erosion protection and may also be suitable.
The body of research that points to road construction
as the major cause of stream sedimentation in mountainous environments
also indicates that surface erosion on severely disturbed soils such as
road fills is highest immediately following disturbance and decreases
rapidly over time. This suggests that stabilization measures must be employed
during and immediately following construction. The methods chosen must
provide rapid benefits, hence merely seeding disturbed areas may not provide
much relief. Transplanting living plants, fertilizing, or mulching exposed
soil surfaces may be required to achieve the desired level of protection.
Figure 94. Selection criteria for slope stabilization
methods
5.2.1 Site Analysis
In order to ensure success of any revegetation effort,
it is necessary to prepare an overall plan which considers the climate,
vegetation, and microsite (soils, microclimate, slope, and aspect).
Climatic information should center on rainfall frequency
distribution and amount. Likewise, average temperature, minimum/maximum
temperatures, heating degree days and number of frost free days are important
points to consider. The vegetation analysis includes the
suitability of native or exotic (introduced) plant species for the specific
area in question. Here, the focus should be set on inventorying the entire
spectrum of plant species that occupy a given site. The survey should
note the particular microsites, soils and aspects in which different species
grow. Typical points to consider include:
- which plants do well in a wide range of conditions
- which plants make good seed crops
- which plants root readily when partially buried or resprout from roots
cut during construction
- which plants have the best attributes for erosion control (rapid, dense
growth; growing season; rooting characteristics).
Microsite evaluation should consider
factors such as microclimate, aspect, topography and soils. The microclimate
is primarily affected by variations in the radiation balance and the immediate
surroundings. Changes in the radiation balance will affect microclimate
regime and surface temperatures -- two extremely important factors for
plant survival. Examples are changing the surface color or establishing
a vapor barrier. Installing a vapor barrier to reduce evaporation losses
will result in increases in the surface temperature. By changing the surface
to a light color, the radiation absorbed by the surface can be reduced
to compensate for the temperature rise. For further information on the
interaction of microclimate and vegetation, the reader is referred to
Geiger (1961, 1966).
Aspect and topography may reveal the need for specific
site treatment either for plant survival and/or local site stabilization
and slope preparation to allow for plant establishment. Wet and dry areas
should be mapped for determining the need for special dewatering treatments
or adoption of a particular seed mix. Likewise slope angles greater than
40 degrees are often difficult to revegetate, except in cases where slopes
consist of decomposing bedrock or have a uniform, rocky subsoil. Assessment
of the degree of local surface erosion (e.g. shallow versus deep seated)
will determine the need for shallow rooted plant cover or a more deeply
rooted plant species.
Soil analysis should consider the local
soil profile and determine the predominant soil horizon present on the
finished surface. Road cuts or fills may expose layers, strata, or horizons
which may be significantly different from the surface soil which supports
a given plant species community. Factors to consider are pH, salinity,
nutrient levels, and texture (water holding capacity).
5.2.2 Site Preparation
In order to ensure success of any revegetation effort,
it is necessary to prepare a proper seedbed. This may include reshaping
the slope if gravity will cause "ravelling" of loose soil. A 1:1 slope
ratio or better is recommended to provide a good seeding surface. Slopes
of 6 meters (20 feet) or more should be broken up with small ditches or
flat benches on the contour. Roughening the slope along the contours will
reduce the chance of rilling and will provide small depressions which
retain the seed. Oftentimes, construction work or tree and brush removal
generally leave sites sufficiently scarified to permit seed to reach mineral
soil.
Site preparation efforts on shallow soils may permanently
damage the seeding site. The small volume of soil interlacing rocks may
fall in the ditch line and be lost. Likewise, loose soil sidecast on fill
slopes is extremely prone to erosion. Compaction of this sidecast material
with one pass of a sheepsfoot roller will secure the soil to the slope
and provide roughened surface for planting. Fill slopes often are best
treated with brush-layering or wattling in order to provide added mechanical
stability. Typically, fill slopes are more prone to deep seated erosion
(rilling or gullying) than are cut slopes.
5.2.3 Seeding and Planting
Type of seed, plant or cutting will determine the most
appropriate planting technique. Herbaceous species typically germinate
rapidly when compared to woody species. Woody species often must be planted
to greater depths than herbaceous plants and may need mulching to keep
them from drying out before germination takes place. Woody plants often
require protection from herbivores and rodents because of their slow growth.
In addition to providing a dense, fibrous mat of protective
material, seeded grasses and legumes[1] improve the organic and nutrient
balance of the soil. They also act as "nurse plants" to young native species
by providing shade and thereby reducing moisture loss from the soil. Grass
seeding is often considered detrimental to tree regeneration, although
this need not be the case. For instance, in southeast Alaska, grass seeding
of exposed mineral soil helps establish spruce and hemlock seedlings by
reducing the disruptive influence of frost heave and by retarding alder
invasion. Grass species can also be selected such that competition with
tree species for vital soil moisture during critical growth stages is
minimized.
Mixtures of at least three plant species is recommended
to assure continuous, even protection across a slope. In addition to factors
mentioned at the beginning of this section, other factors to consider
in selecting an appropriate mixture include:
- slope stability, angle, aspect, and exposure
- general climatic conditions, including conditions at the time of planting
- competitive ability of species to be planted in relation to native weed
species or desired ultimate vegetation establishment
- susceptibility to foraging by livestock, rodents, and game
- visual and esthetic considerations
- physical and chemical characteristics of the soil.
It is impossible to recommend specific grass seed mixtures in this document.
Likewise, seeding rates depend upon the number of live germinant seeds
per unit weight and not simply on seed weight. For example, one kilogram
of subterranean clover contains 34,000 seeds whereas one kilogram of timothy
grass has 590,000 seeds--a 17.3 fold difference. In general, 1,100 to
1,600 live pure seed per square meter (100 to 150 per square foot) are
sufficient seed densities for roadside erosion control in temperate climates
(Berglund, 1978). It may be desirable to increase this rate in critical
areas--culvert and bridge installations and road fill slopes--and decrease
it in less critical or arid areas. Because of wide variations between
sites and adaptability of individual grass and forb species around the
globe, appropriate specialists should be consulted in each case in order
to tailor the seed mixture to site conditions. These specialists include
soil scientists, agronomists, ecologists, range conservationists, wildlife
biologists, and landscape architects.
Generally, a vigorous, fast-spreading legume is included
in the seed mixture because of its beneficial effects in replenishing
soil nitrogen. Care must be taken, however, in ensuring that the chosen
legume has been treated with an innoculant of the associated root bacteria.
A problem associated with most legumes is their high palatability to livestock,
deer, elk, and other game. Grazing animals will trample the soil and mechanical
structures and create a more erosive condition than existed prior to the
treatment. It is therefore recommended that legumes not be included
in seed mixtures for sites readily accessible to game animals, cattle,
sheep, or goats unless the legume is known to be unpalatable to animals
(Adams, et al., 1983).
Road construction oftentimes results in the loss of
the very thin mantle of fertile topsoil leaving a relatively infertile
residual subsoil. Fertilizers are often required to provide young plants
with sufficient nutrients. Again, variability from site to site requires
the expertise of a specialist in order to determine proper fertilizer
selection and application rates. In general, fertilizer prescriptions
are developed on the basis of the amount of total nitrogen in the soil.
If a soil test shows total nitrogen to be greater than 0.2 percent, no
fertilizer is needed.
Fertilization normally occurs together with seeding either
prior to or near the end of the rainy season. Two applications--one prior
to and one after the rainy season--are extremely effective. Refertilization
may also be needed in following years due to reductions in vigor of the
crop. If fertilizer costs are prohibitive or supplies limited, it may
be desirable to concentrate efforts on such key areas as large fills and
culvert and bridge emplacements.
[1] Any one of a large group of plants of the pea family
(Leguminosae). Because of their ability to store and fix nitrogen,
legumes, such as alfalfa, are often used in rotation with other cash crops
to restore soil productivity.
5.2.4 Application Methods
Techniques used in establishing grasses include hand-operated
cyclone seeders, truck-mounted broadcast seeders, seed drills, and hydroseeders.
Drilling is best as it places the seed directly in the soil at a controlled
depth and seeding rate, but may be impossible on steep cut banks and fills.
Hydroseeding is the application of seed, fertilizer, and mulch in a slurry
of some sort of viscous water soluble binder, such as wood fiber, from
a truck-mounted tank. This method is most suitable for large areas and
steep slopes where plastering of materials is necessary to achieve uniform
coverage. It is also expensive and sometimes impractical due to climatic,
terrain, or road access conditions. Hand planting is generally effective
for small areas and is often the least expensive. Covering the seed with
at least 0.5 to 1 centimeter of soil is critical. Rainfall may help cover
it, but raking or dragging seeded areas with tire chains, sections of
cyclone fence, or similar objects is the most effective.
Soils which are heavily disturbed or which have little
surface organic material to retard water runoff need protection afforded
by any readily available mulching materials. Such materials include excelsior,
straw, shredded logging residue or slash, and slurried wood or ground
paper fibers. Excelsior provides the best protection but is very expensive.
Straw mulch is very effective when applied at a rate of 5.5 metric tons
per hectare (2 tons per acre) and secured to the surface either mechanically
by punching it into the surface with the end of a shovel or chemically
with a liquid "tackifier" such as emulsified asphalt. Table 36 shows the
effectiveness of different mulches subjected to a rainfall rate of 64
mm (2.5 in) per hour on a 20 percent slope with 15 cm (6 in) of sift loam
over compacted calcareous till. Figure 91 outlines a decision matrix to
use in order to choose the most effective erosion control combination
for a given set of site and climatic conditions.
Table 36. Erosion control and vegetation
establishment effectiveness of various mulches on highways in eastern
and western Washington. Soils: silty, sandy and gravelly loams, glacial
till consisting of sand, gravel and compacted silts and clays (all are
subsoil materials without topsoil addition). Slope lengths: approximate
maximum of 50 m (165 ft). Application rates: Cereal straw - 5,500 kg/ha
(2 t/ac); Straw plus asphalt - 5,500 kg/ha (2 t/ac) and 0.757 I/Kg (200
gal/t), respectively; Wood cellulose fiber- 1,345 kg/ha (1,200 Ibs/ac);
Sod - bentgrass strips 46 cm (18 in) by 1.8 m (6 ft) pegged down every
third row.
|
Surface Cover
|
Jute
|
Excelsior
|
Straw
|
Straw & Asphalt
|
Asphalt
|
Wood
Fiber
|
Sod
|
Rating
|
Erosion Control
|
Sheet erosion
1:1 slope
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
8.0
|
10.0
|
6.0
|
3.0
|
10.0
|
Sheet erosion
2:1 slope
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
7.0
|
6.0
|
10.0
|
Sheet erosion
3:1 + slope
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
Rill erosion
1:1 slope
|
6.0
|
10.0
|
8.0
|
10.0
|
6.0
|
3.0
|
10.0
|
Rill erosion
2:1 slope
|
8.0
|
10.0
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
7.0
|
5.0
|
-
|
Rill erosion
3:1 + slope
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
10.0
|
Sump erosionl
1:1 slope
|
10.0
|
8.0
|
6.0
|
7.0
|
3.0
|
3.0
|
8.0
|
Slump erosion
2:1 slope
|
10.0
|
9.0
|
7.0
|
8.0
|
5.0
|
4.0
|
9.0
|
Slump erosion
3:1 slope
|
Slumps usually do not occur.
|
Vegetation Establishment
|
1.5:1 glasial
till cut slope
|
7.5
|
9.0
|
7.5
|
8.5
|
7.5
|
6.0
|
-
|
2:1 glasial
till cut slope
|
8.9
|
9.5
|
8.0
|
9.3
|
8.7
|
6.2
|
-
|
2:1 sandy loam
fill slope
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
7.5
|
8.5
|
10.0
|
2.5:1 silt loam
cut slope
|
5.0
|
10.0
|
-
|
7.8
|
6.0
|
-
|
-
|
Effectiveness rating: 10.0 = most effective, 1.0 = not effective.
|
Figure 95. Selection criteria for surface cover establishment
methods in relation to erosion risk.
When using straw as a mulch, it is recommended that only "clean" straw
be used to prevent the introduction of noxious plants. Wood fiber should
be applied at a rate of 1.4 to 1.6 metric tons per hectare (0.5 to 0.6
tons per acre). At higher rates, wood fiber improves erosion control but
inhibits plant establishment. When mulching follows seed and fertilizer
application, rather than in combination with seeding and fertilizing (as
is the case sometimes with hydroseeding), there is a much greater chance
that seed will be in direct contact with mineral soil and will germinate
more readily. Hydroseeding a fiber-seed-water slurry can entrap 60-70
percent of the seed in the mulch layer.
5.2.5 Wattling and filter strips
Oftentimes grass cover alone is insufficient to prevent
erosion on long, steep slopes. Wattling or filter strips work to break
the slope into short segments so that the kinetic energy of water flowing
over the surface is dissipated. Many different methods and materials can
be employed to achieve this objective. Heede (1975) successfully used
submerged burlap strips 30 cm (1 ft) wide, placed vertically into the
ground on the contour 0.5 to 1 meter (1.5 to 3 ft) apart from each other
to control rilling in semi-desert regions. Filter windrows can be fabricated
from slash accumulated during road construction and can easily be constructed
simultaneously along with the road (Cook and King, 1983). A rough estimate
of production rates for windrow construction during one demonstration
is 52 m/hour (170 ft/hour) using a track-mounted Caterpillar 235 hydraulic
pull shovel (a large backhoe). Sediment trapping efficiency was estimated
at between 75 and 85 percent. Windrows in this demonstration consisted
of logs not less than 0.45 m (18 in) diameter secured against undisturbed
stumps, rocks, or trees on fill slopes immediately above and parallel
to the toe of the slope. Slash (tops, limbs, and brush not exceeding 15
cm (6 in) in diameter and 3.7 m (12 ft) in length were then placed above
the logs in neat piles (also see Chapter 6.3.3, Figure 119 ).
Table 36 is included to provide guidance in determining
appropriate windrow widths based on the length of the slope and type of
material used to construct the windrow.
Wattling (Figure 96) consists of combined mechanical
and natural stabilization techniques in which stakes are placed on the
contour 0.5 m (1.6 ft) apart and at 1.2 m (4 ft) intervals between rows.
A trench is then dug 20 cm (8 in) wide and 25 cm (10 in) deep against
or immediately above the contour stakes. Bundles of live vegetative materials
(such as Salix spp., Bambusa spp., Cassia sepium
or other locally available material) 13 cm (5 in) in diameter and 3 m
(10 ft) long are placed in the trench overlapping end and tail. The wattling
bundles are then covered with soil so that part of the branches and leaves
above ground are left visible. It is very important that the soil is worked
thoroughly into the interstices of the wattles. During the installation
workers should walk on the wattles as much as possible to insure maximum
compaction and working the soil into the bundles.
Incorrect installation of wattles may actually aid in
soil slumping because of collection of water in the wattle trenches. It
is therefore important that soil is thoroughly worked into the wattles
and no trench remains to be filled with water. Likewise firm staking is
important particularly in areas where frost heaving is a problem. An average
10 person crew can treat 200 m² to 250 m² (2,000 to 2,500 ft2) in a day
(Sheng, 1977b). More detailed information on wattling procedure and installation
can also be found in Kraebel (1936), Grey and Leiser (1982), and Schiechtl
(1978, 1980).
Table 37. Windrow protective strip widths
required below the shoulders[1] of 5 year old[2]
forest roads built on soils derived from basalt[3], having
9 m cross-drain spacing[4], zero initial obstruction distance[5],
and 100 percent fill slope cover density[6].(U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1975).
Obstruction spacing
|
Protective windrow width by type of obstruction
|
Depressions
or mounds
|
Logs
|
Rocks
|
Trees and stumps
|
Slash and brush
|
Herbaceous vegetation
|
meters
|
0.3
|
10.6
|
11.2
|
11.6
|
12.1
|
12.5
|
13.1
|
0.6
|
11.3
|
12.2
|
13.1
|
14.0
|
14.9
|
15.9
|
0.9
|
11.9
|
13.1
|
14.3
|
15.9
|
17.4
|
18.6
|
1.2
|
12.2
|
14.0
|
15.9
|
17.7
|
19.5
|
21.3
|
1.5
|
12.5
|
14.6
|
17.0
|
19.2
|
21.6
|
23.8
|
1.8
|
|
15.2
|
18.0
|
20.7
|
23.5
|
26.2
|
2.1
|
|
15.9
|
18.9
|
22.2
|
25.6
|
28.7
|
2.4
|
|
16.2
|
19.8
|
23.5
|
27.1
|
30.8
|
2.7
|
|
16.5
|
20.4
|
24.7
|
29.0
|
32.9
|
3.0
|
|
|
|
25.9
|
30.5
|
35.1
|
3.4
|
|
|
|
27.8
|
31.7
|
36.9
|
3.7
|
|
|
|
|
|
38.7
|
[1] For protective strip widths from centerlines of proposed roads,
increase widths by one-half the proposed road width.
[2] If storage capacity of obstructions is to be renewed when roads
are 3 years old, reduce protective strip width by 7 m.
[3] If soil is derived from andesite, increase protective strip
width by 30 cm; from glacial till, increase 1 m; from hard sediments,
increase 2.4 m; from granite, increase 2.5 m; from loess, increase
7 m.
[4] For each increase in cross-drain spacing beyond 9 m, increase
protective strip width 30 cm.
[5] For each 1.5 m increase in distance to the initial obstruction
beyond zero (or the road shoulder), increase protective strip width
1.2 m.
[6] For each 10 percent decrease in fill slope cover below a density
of 100 percent, increase protective strip width 0.30 m.
|
Figure 96. Preparation and installation
procedure for contour wattling, using live willow stakes Shown are (a)
stems of cut brush wattles; (b) live willow stakes that have rooted sprouts;
(c) inert construction stakes driven through wattles; (d), (e), and (f)
vegetation (grasses, shrubs, and trees) (after Kraebel, 1936).
5.2.6 Brush Layering
Contour brush layering (Figure 97) involves embedding
green branches of shrubs or trees on successive horizontal layers into
the slope. Brush layering is different from wattling in that (1) branches
are placed into the slope perpendicular to the strike instead of parallel
creating better resistance to shallow shear failure, (2) staking is not
required, (3) brush layers and surfaces can be reinforced with wire mesh
or other material, (4) brush layers can be incorporated into the construction
process of a fill. That is, brush layers are laid down, the next lift
of soil is placed and compacted, and the process is repeated.
Contour brush layering is comparable to the "reinforced
earth" concept where the cuttings or branches act in the same fashion
as the reinforcing strips.
Figure 97. Brush layer installation for slope stabilization
using rooted plants for cut slope and green branches for fill slope stabilization.
According to Schiechtl (1978, 1980) three brush layering
techniques may be used. The first technique uses brush layers consisting
of rooted plants or rooted cuttings only. Approximately 5 to 20 rooted
seedlings per meter are required (See Figure 97).
The second technique utilizes green cuttings or branches
from alder, cottonwood or willow. On cut slopes, cuttings from 0.5 to
2.0 meters in length are used. On fill slopes, cutting length can vary
from 2.0 to 5.0 meters. This method is particularly suited for use in
critical and sensitive areas.
The third technique is a combination of the first two
methods where rooted seedlings or cuttings are installed together with
branches or cuttings. From 1 to 5 rooted cuttings per meter are required.
In all three methods, the material should be placed with
the butt ends slightly dipping into the fill (20 percent) and the tips
protruding a few centimeters. Vertical spacing of brush layers can vary
from 0.5 to 1.5 meters depending on soil type, erosion hazard, slope angle
and length of slope. A good practice is to vary the vertical spacing on
long slopes with short spacings at the bottom and increasing the spacing
towards the upper end of the slope.
A variation to the contour brush layering approach where
the layers are positioned along the contours or horizontally is to arrange
the layers at a 10 - 40 percent incline. This variation is called for
on wet, heavy soils or slopes with numerous small springs. Water collecting
in the berms or brush layers is drained off and does not stagnate and
infiltrate into the slope.
Installation procedures typically proceed from bottom
to top. Fill slope installation is simple. However, care should be taken
that the brush layer dips into the slope at least 20 percent. The next
soil layer is placed on top and compacted. Cut slope installation requires
the opening of a ditch or berm. As with fills, work progresses from bottom
to top. The excavation of the upper berm is used for filling-in and covering
the lower brush layer.
5.2.7. Mechanical Treatment
Mechanical surface stabilization measures consist of
diversion ditches and terraces, serrations, or scarification and can be
used in conjunction with vegetative methods discussed above. These methods
generally require detailed engineering design and location. T. C. Sheng
(1977a) discusses several different methods for the construction of bench
terraces together with tables providing design information and costs.
Serrations consist of steps of 60 to 120 cm (2 to 4 ft)
cut vertically and horizontally along the normal, intended slope gradient.
After treatment, the slope is seeded, fertilized, and mulched as discussed
in Chapter 5.2.3. The steps provide improved seedbeds free of sliding
forces normally experienced on steep slopes. Serrations are only effective
on cut slopes of soft rock or similar material that will stand vertically
or near vertically for a few years in cut heights of approximately one
meter. Likewise, this method is not applicable to soil types where the
rate of slough is so high that vegetative cover is buried and destroyed.
If acceptable slope material is soft, the slope should be allowed to slough
before seeding until about one-third of the steps are filled. Otherwise,
grass may be destroyed by the excessive rate of initial slough.
Roughened or scarified slopes may not be as esthetically
pleasing to the eye as smoothly graded cut and fill slopes, but they are
far more effective in increasing infiltration and impeding runoff. Scarified
slopes also provide small depressions for the retention of seed and also
help mulch to better adhere to the slope. Roughening may be accomplished
by several means including deep cleated bulldozers traveling up and down
the slope, sheepsfoot rollers, rock rippers, and brush rakes mounted on
bulldozers. The path of the roughened slope should trend perpendicular
to the direction of flow.
5.3 Mass Movement Protection
Deep seated mass failures can be dealt with in three
ways. The methods are categorized by the way they affect soil stability.
-
Avoidance Methods: Relocate road on
a more stable area (for large, unstable fills probably by far the
most appropriate approach).
-
Reducing Shear Stress: This
is achieved through excavation of unacceptable materials. It creates
a reduction in soil weight and can be accomplished by: a) removal
of soil mass at the top of the potential slide, b) flattening of cut
slopes above the road, c) benching of cut slopes.
-
Increasing Shear Strength:
This is achieved through retaining structures. They can be grouped
into a) rock buttresses at the toe of fill slope, b) cribs or gravity
retaining walls at toe of fill or cut, and c) piling walls, likewise
at the toe of fills or cuts.
Engineering and structural methods for stabilizing slopes can be grouped
into four categories:
-
Excavation and filling techniques. This
would include excavating the toe of an earth flow until successive
failures result in a stable slope, removing and replacing failed material
with lighter, more stable material, or recompacted debris, excavating
to unload upper portions of a mass failure, and filling to load the
lower portions of a mass failure (most likely in conjunction with
other loading or restraining structures).
-
Drainage techniques. This would include
efforts to remove or disperse surface water (as discussed in Chapter
4), drainage of tension cracks, using rock fill underlain by filter
cloth to prevent upward migration of water into the road prism, insertion
of trench drains, perforated, horizontal drains, or drainage galleries,
insertion of vertical drains or wells discharged by syphons, or pumps,
and electro-osmosis (the use of direct current passing between wellpoints
and steel rods placed midway between the rods to increase the drainage
rate) for drainage of low permeability soils.
-
Restraining structures. These include
retaining walls, piles, buttresses, counterweight fills, cribs, bin
walls, reinforced earth, and pre-stressed or post-tensioned soil or
rock anchors (Figure 98). Organizations such as highway departments
and railroads have developed charts and tables giving earth pressures
for the design of retaining walls that require a minimum of computation.
Nearly all of these charts and tables are based on the Rankine formula
which describes earth pressures as a function of unit weight and internal
angle of friction of the backfill material.
- Miscellaneous techniques. Grouting can
be used to reduce soil permeability, thereby preventing the ingress
of groundwater into a failure zone. Chemical stabilization, generally
in the form of ion exchange methods, is accomplished by high pressure
injection of specificion exchange solutions into failure zones or into
closely spaced pre-drillled holes throughout the movement zone. Heating
or baking of clay soils can sometimes improve their strength, and, rarely,
freezing of soils will help gain temporary stability. Localized electro-osmosis
can be used to form in situ anchors or tie-backs. Suppression
of natural electro-osmosis can be used to reduce unfavorable groundwater
pressures. Blasting is sometimes used to disrupt failure surfaces and
to improve drainage.
Figure 98. Types of retaining walls.
For correcting cut or fill failures, a detailed investigation
into the reason for the failure, particularly the position and geometry
of the failure surface and other potential failure surfaces, is required
prior to prescribing ameliorative measures. The neutral line concept,
discussed by Hutchinson (1977) and Sidle, et al. (1985), is of particular
interest in assessing the impact of cuts and fills on factors of safety.
The neutral line describes where the load attributed to fill material
will have no effect on the original factor of safety. If the load falls
up-slope of the neutral line, the factor of safety will decrease; if it
is downslope of the neutral line, the factor of safety will decrease.
The use of any of these stabilization techniques requires
extensive site specific investigations into the mechanics of soils, groundwater,
and bedrock occurring on the site. It is advisable to utilize the most
experienced geotechnical or highway engineer available in order to provide
the most effective design possible. As can be inferred from the above
discussion, any of these techniques will be quite costly to design and
install. Furthermore, the success of such measures in functioning adequately
through time is highly dependent on the skill of the design engineer and
the degree of maintenance employed after construction. Hence, avoidance
of areas where structural stabilization measures are required will result
in considerable short term and long term cost savings, and the major opportunity
for reducing landslide risk is at the route planning stage.
The purpose of a retaining structure is to provide stability
against sliding or failure and protection against scour and erosion of
a slope, or the toe or cutface. The typical retaining structure on forest
roads is a gravity retaining wall which resists earth pressure by the
force of its own weight. Excavation and/or fill volume can be significantly
reduced particularly on steep side slopes (see also discussion in Chapter
3.2).
The volume of cribs or retaining walls should be 1/6
to 1/10 of that of the total moving mass to be retained. As a rule, the
foundation or base should at least extend 1.2 to 2.0 meters below the
slip plane in order to be effective.
The forces acting on a retaining wall are similar to
those acting on a natural slope. These forces are be grouped into resisting
forces (forces resisting failure) and driving forces (forces causing failure)
as illustrated in Figure 99.
Failure of a retaining wall can be brought about through
- sliding along its base
- bearing capacity failure
- overturning
Figure 99. Forces acting on a retaining wall.
For low toe walls or toe-bench structures it is usually
possible to use standard designs. Standard designs have been developed
on the basis of soil mechanics and past performance. Standard designs
have been developed by a number of sources and are typically available
on request. These sources include manufacturers of retaining wall systems
(e.g. gabions, crib walls, welded-wire walls, geotextiles), trade associations
(e.g. American Wood Preservers Institute), and state and federal agencies
(e.g. Forest Service, Highway Administration, local transportation departments).
Standard designs can be used safely provided they conform with the local
conditions The factors or conditions to consider include maximum wall
height, surcharge conditions, strength and finish of structural members,
inclination requirements, construction requirements, backfill material,
soil conditions at base, and groundwater conditions.
An example of a standard log crib wall is shown in Figure
100. A thorough discussion of timber walls is provided by Schuster et
al. (1973). Timber crib walls and gabion structures can withstand some
limited, differential base settlement without a significantly affecting
the retaining action. Drainage characteristics of the backfill and crib
material is important because of potential water pressure build-up. Most
standard designs assume free draining sand or gravel fills.
Gabions are rectangular containers made of heavy steel
wire and filled with cobble-sized rocks (10 to 30 cm in diameter). A typical
gabion retaining wall is shown in Figure 101. Advantages of gabion structures
are ease of construction, tolerance of uneven settlement, and good drainage
characteristics. Gabion walls are particularly suited in areas where only
small, fragmented rocks are available. Typically, they can be built without
heavy equipment. Both crib and gabion walls lend themselves to incorporation
of vegetative systems to provide additional strength over time as well
as providing a more esthetically pleasing appearance.
Gravity retaining structures utilizing standard designs
are typically limited to a height of less than 6.0 meters. Structures
requiring a larger height have to be designed based on site-specific soil
mechanical conditions.
Figure 100. Example of a standard crib wall design.
(Wash. State Dept. of Highways).
Figure 101. Low gabion breast walls showing sequence
of excavation, assembly, and filling. (From White and Franks, 1978).
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