An Explosive Waterproofing Of A Riverbank - A Difficult Waterproofing Problem Solved By The Unique And Controversial Combination Of A Mining Technique (Blasting) And A Soil Improvement Technique (Jet-Grouting) - The Problem

Deep Foundations Institute
M. Zanotto
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
19
File Size:
4013 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1992

Abstract

[ ] A period of heavy rains caused the river Adda to flood parts of the Valtellina, one of the Alpine valleys of Northern Italy. The exceptionally high waters put under considerable strain the whole system of embankments and levees controlling the river and protecting the adjacent towns and lands. In some places the water breached and washed away the embankments, submerging large tracts of cultivated land, buildings, roads and railway tracks. The town of Talamona, in the lower Valtellina, was hit particularly hard: in its proximity the river overrun and then washed away 300 m (1,000 ft) of embankment (see vicinity map, fig. 2), depositing large amounts of riverbed debris onto over 400 hectares (1,000 acres) of fertile land.
Citation

APA: M. Zanotto  (1992)  An Explosive Waterproofing Of A Riverbank - A Difficult Waterproofing Problem Solved By The Unique And Controversial Combination Of A Mining Technique (Blasting) And A Soil Improvement Technique (Jet-Grouting) - The Problem

MLA: M. Zanotto An Explosive Waterproofing Of A Riverbank - A Difficult Waterproofing Problem Solved By The Unique And Controversial Combination Of A Mining Technique (Blasting) And A Soil Improvement Technique (Jet-Grouting) - The Problem. Deep Foundations Institute, 1992.

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