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  FIELD INVESTIGATION AND LABORATORY SOIL TESTS ON 
 HETEROGENEOUS  
 NATURE OF ALLUVIAL DEPOSITS 
  
 TAMIO MASUDA, SUSUMU YASUDA, NOZOMU YOSHIDA and MASAYUKI SATO  
 ABSTRACT This text is concerned with the basic 
 principles underlying current practice in the earthquake response 
 analysis of soft alluvial deposits. Its special interest is focused on 
 the stratification of alluvium that has been modeled in analyses by 
 layers in which soil properties are uniform. Since the age and the 
 effective stress are continuous in the vertical direction, it is 
 possible that the soil-dynamic properties such as shear modulus and 
 damping ratio are not uniform but varying continuously in the vertical 
 direction. From this viewpoint, the conventional idea of uniform layers 
 was examined in detail by conducting detailed investigations in-situ, as 
 well as laboratory tests on continuously collected undisturbed soil 
 samples. The test results show that soil properties continuously vary in 
 the vertical direction within an alluvium. This holds true even when the 
 soil type changes from clayey to sandy. In contrast, a discontinuity of 
 properties was detected at an unconformity of Pleistocene layers where 
 the age and sedimentation process are discontinuous. With this 
 knowledge, an attempt was made to propose a recommendable modelling of 
 soil stratification for practical earthquake response analysis on 
 alluvium.   
 Key words: dynamic analysis, earthquake response 
 analysis, geophysical exploration, in-situ test, nonlinear analysis, 
 soft ground (IGC: D7/E8)  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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