Monitoring the tidal response of a sea levee with ambient seismic noise

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

Thomas Planès (Colorado School of Mines)

Justin B. Rittgers (Colorado School of Mines)

Michael A. Mooney (Colorado School of Mines)

Willem Kanning (Colorado School of Mines)

D. Draganov (TU Delft - Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics)

Research Group
Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jappgeo.2017.01.025
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Research Group
Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics
Volume number
138
Pages (from-to)
255-263

Abstract

Internal erosion, a major cause of failure of earthen dams and levees, is often difficult to detect at early stages using traditional visual inspection. The passive seismic-interferometry technique could enable the early detection of internal changes taking place within these structures. We test this technique on a portion of the sea levee of Colijnsplaat, Netherlands, which presents signs of concentrated seepage in the form of sandboils. Applying seismic interferometry to ambient noise collected over a 12-hour period, we retrieve surface waves propagating along the levee. We identify the contribution of two dominant ambient seismic noise sources: the traffic on the Zeeland bridge and a nearby wind turbine. Here, the sea-wave action does not constitute a suitable noise source for seismic interferometry. Using the retrieved surface waves, we compute time-lapse variations of the surface-wave group velocities during the 12-hour tidal cycle for different frequency bands, i.e., for different depth ranges. The estimated group-velocity variations correlate with variations in on-site pore-water pressure measurements that respond to tidal loading. We present lateral profiles of these group-velocity variations along a 180-meter section of the levee, at four different depth ranges (0m–40m). On these profiles, we observe some spatially localized relative group-velocity variations of up to 5% that might be related to concentrated seepage.

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