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         DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW CONE PENETROMETER AND ITS 
        APPLICATION TO GREAT DEPTHS OF PLEISTOCENE CLAYS  
        HIROYUKI TANAKA, MASANORI TANAKA, SHINYA SUZUKI and 
        TOSHIHIKO SAKAGAMI  
        
      ABSTRACT:        A new piezocone was developed and applied to Osaka Pleistocene clay layers as deep as 250m. Its geometry is the same as that of the reference procedure defined by the ISSMFE and standard of JGS: i.e., the projected cross sectional area is 10   
      cm2; the angle of the cone is 60°; the pore water pressure is measured at the shoulder. This piezocone does not measure the skin friction. Due to the great depth at the investigated site, the capacity of the point resistance   
      (qt) and the pore water pressure is as large as 30 MPa and 20 MPa, respectively. The test was carried out, using a borehole drilled prior to the penetration, because of stiff sand or gravel layers and large skin friction between the rod and the ground. The   
      qt   
      measured by the cone penetration test (CPT) was correlated to the yield consolidation pressure (py) measured by the Constant Rate of Strain (CRS) oedometer test for the soil sample recovered near the point of CPT investigation. The cone factor for the   
      py   
      value (Npc) was defined by   
      (qt-pvo)/py, where   
      pvo is the in situ total overburden pressure. The range of observed   
      Npc   
      value is relatively narrow and between 2.5 and 2.8, which is in the middle of   
      the range of Npc   
      factors measured in Holocene clays in the various areas in the world as well as Japan. The overconsolidation ratio (OCR) was also derived by CPT. Variation of the OCR estimated by the CPT is nearly equivalent to that measured by the CRS oedometer. It may be concluded from this investigation that the consolidation properties, especially   
      the py   
      value, derived from samples recovered from great depths, are quite reliable as design parameters.     
           
       Key words: cone penetration test, Pleistocene clay,   
      sample quality, variation, yield consolidation pressure (IGC: D5)    
          
          
          
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