Lecture 1 - Introduction
Lecture 1 - Introduction
Rock Mechanics
Dr Sérgio D.N. Lourenço & Prof Jun Yang
Venue and time
1st part – Engineering Geology: Dr Sérgio D.N. Lourenço
(7 weeks)
2nd part – Rock Mechanics: Professor Jun Yang (7 weeks)
Monday – 14:30-15:20
Thursday – 13:30-15:20
Venue: MB217
All lectures f2f
Videos uploaded into Moodle for the first 2-weeks
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Learning outcomes
1. Describe the main minerals, rock types (metamorphic,
igneous and sedimentary) and surface deposits, the
processes responsible for their formation and occurrence.
2. Outline the geology of Hong Kong, recognize its relevance
to civil engineering and acknowledge ground variability.
3. Interpret geological maps, construct elementary geological
cross-sections and plot stereonets.
4. Understand the fundamentals of stresses and strains in rocks
and the major techniques for measuring in situ stresses.
5. Describe the behaviour and properties of rocks as an
engineering material, including failure and strength of intact
rock, rock discontinuity and rock mass.
6. Apply rock mechanics in engineering practice, including rock
slope stability and stabilization, excavations in rocks, and
rock foundations.
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Content
Engineering Geology (1st part)
Hard rock geology: minerals, igneous rocks and
metamorphic rocks, structural geology
The sedimentary system: sedimentary rocks, depositional
environments, principles of stratigraphy
Weathering: processes, material grades
Geology of Hong Kong
Geological maps & cross-sections
Rock masses, discontinuities and stereonets
Geological controls of engineering works
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Content
Rock Mechanics (2nd part)
Fundamentals of stresses and strains and their relations
In-situ stresses in rocks and measurements
Laboratory testing techniques for rocks
Failure of intact rock, rock discontinuity and rock mass;
strength theory
Rock slopes and stabilisation
Excavations in rocks, rock foundations
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Assessment
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Assessment
Continuous assessment (10%)
Engineering Geology Personal and Protective Equipment
1) Each student has to bring and wear
1. Fieldtrip + fieldtrip report his/her own safety footwear for all site visits
Rock Mechanics 2) At the gathering point, each student must
be checked to make sure that he/she wears
1. Assignment 1
safety shoes.
2. Assignment 2 3) Those students who do not do so shall be
turned away and NOT allowed to join the
site visit.
4) For a compulsory site visit, they shall in
turn receive zero marks for this part of the
assessment.
5) No makeup site visit shall be arranged for
them.
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Assessment - Fieldtrip
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Assessment
Examination (70%)
Two parts
Engineering Geology 50%
Rock Mechanics 50%
3 hours
Sit-in exam, closed-book
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Engineering Geology
What is it?
Investigation, study and solutions of
problems that arise from the interaction
between geology and man’s activities
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Engineering Geology
What is it?
Application of geology to engineering
practice
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Engineering Geology
Subject at the interface of geology and
civil engineering:
a) Transport
Bridges and waterways
14 bridges waterways
Engineering Geology
Subject at the interface of geology and
civil engineering:
a) Transport
Tunnels, railways and roads
15 railways roads
Engineering Geology
Subject at the interface of geology and
civil engineering:
b) Water supply
Dams and pipelines
landfill
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Engineering Geology
Subject at the interface of geology and
civil engineering:
d) Urban development
Office buildings, warehouses, housing
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Engineering Geology
Subject at the interface of geology and civil engineering:
ENGINEERING GEOLOGY: draws heavily on structural
geology, petrology, sedimentology, geomorphology
Associated fields:
soil mechanics
rock mechanics
hydrogeology
applied geophysics
spatial characterization dyke
fault
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Engineering Geology
What do Engineering Geologists do?
Ground investigation
Dam & bridge foundation design
Tunnel & road design
Mining & quarrying
Assessment of contaminated land
Remediation of old mine workings
Geophysical surveying/remote sensing/GIS
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Engineering Geology
THIS COURSE:
Will it make you an engineering geologist?
No. You’ll need to follow an MSc.
What will you learn?
the language of the geologist
some basic geology concepts
how basic geology knowledge is applied in civil engineering
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Engineering Geology
Most engineering geologists have degrees in Geology or
Civil Engineering
GEOLOGISTS: prefer to solve a problem intuitively,
indirectly and qualitatively, often preferring the problem
to the results. Complexities emphasized. Reluctant to
simplify the problem. Trained to entertain alternative
hypotheses.
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Engineering Geology
Most engineering geologists have degrees in Geology or
Civil Engineering
ENGINEERS: trained to be analytical. Rely on numerical
data. Want to simplify in order to get numerical results.
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Engineering Geology
GEOLOGIST: ENGINEER:
“thick bedded, cross- “sandstone, strong,
bedded micaceous permeable, 2 sets of
sediments. Deltaic discontinuities”
environment, easterly
current directions, plant
remains, scour structures.
Well jointed, with cleavage
is finer-grained material.
Thin conglomerate lenses,
etc, etc.”
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Engineering Geology
ENGINEERING GEOLOGIST:
Is able to translate traditional geological information into
the language used by engineer. Boils down complexities
into simpler model of reality, emphasising relevant aspects
for engineer.
Must know geological and engineering terminology.
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Lectures plan
FUNDAMENTALS
16/01/23 M: Introduction to engineering geology;
19/01/23: Th: Plate tectonics; minerals
30/01/23 M: Igneous rocks
02/02/23 Th: Formation of sedimentary rocks, sedimentary rocks; stratigraphy
06/02/23 M: Structural geology
09/02/23 Th: Metamorphic rocks; HK geology
13/02/23 M: Weathering
METHODS
16/02/23 Th: Geological maps & cross-sections
20/02/23 M: Geological maps & cross-sections
23/02/23 Th: Rock masses, discontinuities & stereonets
APPLICATIONS
27/02/23 M: Geology for engineering
02/03/23 M: Geology for engineering
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Reading
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Download from HKUL
Reading
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Download from HKUL
Reading
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Download from HKUL
Plagiarism
Students caught will be referred to the disciplinary
committee
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Next lecture
FUNDAMENTALS: Plate tectonics, earthquakes, volcanism
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