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Shallow seismic experiments using shear waves

  • R. D. Stoll
  • , G. M. Bryan
  • , R. Flood
  • , D. Chayes
  • , P. Manley
  • Columbia University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

During the summer of 1986, a series of seismo-acoustic experiments was carried out in shallow water off the New Jersey shore. The purpose of these experiments was to measure the geoacoustic properties of the ocean sediments that comprise the upper few hundred meters of the sediment column. Seismic sources and receivers were deployed at or very near the bottom in order to excite shear waves in the sediment and minimize the effects of interference from waterborne propagation. The experiments were performed at several sites where prior field work had established physical properties and a detailed profile of the sediments. By using conventional air guns deployed in an unconventional way, strong interface and diving shear waves were generated; these data were inverted to obtain shear wave velocity as a function of depth. The inversion results were then compared with the predictions of a geoacoustic model that accounts for the effects of voids ratio, overburden pressure, and other physical parameters. The in situ measurements from experiments and the gradients predicted by the model were in good agreement, suggesting a strong dependence of velocity on overburden pressure near the water-sediment interface.PACS numbers: 43.30.Ma, 43.40.Ph, 92.10.Sx, 92.10.Vz.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)93-102
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of the Acoustical Society of America
Volume83
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1988

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