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Figure 3-1: Schematic of various in-situ tests (Mayne et al. 2002). The use of geophysics methods is becoming more common in site investigations. However, due to the need for samples for soil and rock classification and laboratory testing, it is recommended that techniques that provide soil or rock specimens always be used whenever a geophysical investigation is performed. Geophysics can be used in preliminary
or planning investigations, or for investigating specific issues for foundation design such as karst features or areas with highly variable rock surface. These methods maybe beneficial for general site characterization and planning subsurface investigations, but are generally of limited value for development of design parameters for this application.
For soils, soil borings and SPT tests, or similar drive tests
appropriate for site soils, should always be conducted on projects involving deep foundations in order to retrieve samples for proper subsurface characterization and laboratory testing. Similarly, where deep foundations are
expected to bear on or in rock, borings with rock coring should always be performed. Additional explorations methods,
such as CPT and DMT, maybe useful and maybe more economical by allowing a reduction in the number of exploratory borings, and may provide data that SPT and rock coring do not. However, the CPT and DMT do not recover soil samples (and
do not penetrate rock, but could be used in conjunction with SPT borings in order to correlate the in-situ testing results with actual soil classification and laboratory test data, as well as with SPT N-values.
Some types of in-situ tests, such as the PMT and VST, can be performed within an SPT boring if the casing size is large enough to accommodate the testing device. This may offer opportunities for combined types of data acquisition (recovered samples and in-situ test measurements) at a single exploration point.