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  DAMAGE FACTORS FOR SMALL EMBANKMENT DAMS DUE TO THE 
 HYOGOKEN-NAMBU EARTHQUAKE  
 -CASE STUDY ON HOKUDAN TOWN-  
 
 
 HIROAKI FUJII, KANA KUNIMASA, AKIYO NANBA, TAKAYUKI 
 YOKOMIZO, SHIN-ICHI NISHIMURA, KIYOSHI SHIMADA, 
 TOSHlO HORI and TATSURO NIsHIYAMAV  
 ABSTRACT: This study was performed to clarify which 
 factors affected damage to tame-like (small embankment dams for 
 irrigation) in Hokudan Town as a result of the January 17, 1995 
 Hyogoken-Nambu earthquake. Factors were assumed to be: Location (e.g., 
 Distance to Epicenter, etc.), Structure (e.g., Angle to Nearest Fault, 
 Embankment Volume, etc.), Soil Properties of Embankment, Geology of Dam 
 Site and History (Era of Construction, Repaired, etc.). Multivariate 
 statistical analyses were performed for documentary data (damaged: 181, 
 undamaged: 328). Ordinary statistical analyses were conducted for the data 
 investigated in situ for soil properties of the embankment. The results 
 show that the factors causing damage to dam are: (1) Nearest Fault (Nojima, 
 Mizukoshi and D2), (2) Distance to Nearest Fault (less than 500 m, (3) 
 Distance to Epicenter (approximately 8 to 14 kin, which almost agrees with 
 the location of seismic intensity 7 JMA), (4) Elevation of Dam Site 
 (higher than 100 in), (5) Embankment Volume (the greater the volume the 
 more damage was caused), (6) Direction of Dam Axis (normal or diagonal to 
 the epicenter or to nearest the fault), (7) Plan View of Dam Axis (3 or 4 
 axes), (8) Surface Geology of Dam Site (non-cohesive soil type ground), 
 (9) Era of Construction (prior to 1891) and (10) Soil Properties of 
 Embankment (sand, not silty sand or gravel, penetration resistance that is 
 10% smaller than the undamaged dams).   
 Key words: case history, compaction, dam, earthquake 
 damage, site investigation, statistical analysis (IGC: 
 E8/H4/E6)  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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