Recent findings in London show that the subsurface is much more complex than expected,with a number of apparently anomalous features that present a direct hazard to infrastructure development and a risk to ground water management. Of these features, one of the least understood are the large superficial hollows which occur in the rockhead—in much of the London Basin, this is the top of the London Clay Formation—and which are infilled by a range of Quaternary deposits, principally alluvial sands and gravels deposited by the River Thames and its tributaries. The hollows range in size and shape. Several are a few hundred metres across and can be up to 40–50 m deep, though determining their exact form is problematic. The soil and sediment infil...
The Limmo Peninsula site has some of the most complex geology of London's Crossrail project and was ...
London lies mainly within an area of long-term tectonic stability known as the London Platform. This...
About every three years natural catastrophic subsidence, caused by gypsum dissolution, occurs in the...
Engineering works carried out in central London over many decades have revealed a number of buried h...
Drift-filled’ hollows are an increasingly recognised hazard in the London Basin. This largely reflec...
A reappraisal of ground investigation data across London reveal that a range of unexpected ground co...
Engineering works carried out in central London over many decades have unearthed a number of drift-f...
All data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article (and its sup...
Drift filled hollows (DFHs) are a major subsurface hazard for engineering in London. They are charac...
Michael de Freitas1 and Katherine Royse2 say geologists and engineers from all backgrounds can now c...
Historically, engineers frequently viewed the London Clay Formation (LC) as uniform, homogeneous and...
The population of London is around seven million. The infrastructure to support this requires Londo...
Critical infrastructure projects in London increasingly encounter unexpected ground conditions cause...
This book brings together information that results from research on the ground beneath the streets ...
Variable deposits known to make up the sequence of the Harwich Formation in London have been the sub...
The Limmo Peninsula site has some of the most complex geology of London's Crossrail project and was ...
London lies mainly within an area of long-term tectonic stability known as the London Platform. This...
About every three years natural catastrophic subsidence, caused by gypsum dissolution, occurs in the...
Engineering works carried out in central London over many decades have revealed a number of buried h...
Drift-filled’ hollows are an increasingly recognised hazard in the London Basin. This largely reflec...
A reappraisal of ground investigation data across London reveal that a range of unexpected ground co...
Engineering works carried out in central London over many decades have unearthed a number of drift-f...
All data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article (and its sup...
Drift filled hollows (DFHs) are a major subsurface hazard for engineering in London. They are charac...
Michael de Freitas1 and Katherine Royse2 say geologists and engineers from all backgrounds can now c...
Historically, engineers frequently viewed the London Clay Formation (LC) as uniform, homogeneous and...
The population of London is around seven million. The infrastructure to support this requires Londo...
Critical infrastructure projects in London increasingly encounter unexpected ground conditions cause...
This book brings together information that results from research on the ground beneath the streets ...
Variable deposits known to make up the sequence of the Harwich Formation in London have been the sub...
The Limmo Peninsula site has some of the most complex geology of London's Crossrail project and was ...
London lies mainly within an area of long-term tectonic stability known as the London Platform. This...
About every three years natural catastrophic subsidence, caused by gypsum dissolution, occurs in the...