Deep Marine Foundations - An Introduction

Deep Foundations Institute
Ben C. Gerwick
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
2
File Size:
23 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2013

Abstract

This publication is intended to document recent innovations and technologies that have the best potential for effectively improving the quality of marine foundations while reducing the cost, time and risk of construction. Marine foundations originated in Neolithic times with the Swiss Lake Dwellers who constructed pile-supported houses, safe from invading tribes. The Queen of Babylonia built the first recorded bridge in 1500 BC across the Tigris. The foundations were large flat stones laid on the river bottom. About the same time in India, builders extended their water well techniques to the construction of ?well? foundations in the beds of their rivers. These were really the first open caissons; brick walls were built up in a circular ring while divers excavated sand from the bottom, sometimes at a depth of 100 feet. The Romans extended the clay-filled cribs of the Middle East to shallow cofferdams, which they sealed by underwater concrete made with pozzolanic cement from Mt. Vesuvius.
Citation

APA: Ben C. Gerwick  (2013)  Deep Marine Foundations - An Introduction

MLA: Ben C. Gerwick Deep Marine Foundations - An Introduction. Deep Foundations Institute, 2013.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account