Geotechnical Logging - Quick Reference
Geotechnical Logging - Quick Reference
The purpose of Geotechnical Logging is to collect the necessary geotechnical information in order to:
Describe the physical characteristics of the rock mass and major structures.
Classify the rock mass and major structures using industry standards
* The absolute minimum data parameters should be collected for exploration drill core, such as Core Recovery,
RQD, and Fracture Frequency. Once the core is cut for assay this information is lost.
Introduction cont.
Geotechnical information such as:
shape
roughness
infill
can indicate the stability of the structure - planar, smooth structure with soft infill is more likely to move than an irregular,
rough structure with no infill.
The orientation of a discontinuity can affect the direction of a tunnel while microfractures and veinlets
are used in block caving assessments.
Hydrological info:
ground water indicators along with cavities and joints can affect groundwater flow .
The required detail of logging depends on the proposed mine environment. Logging for an underground
development and caveability studies requires detailed logging sometimes on short intervals.
Sometimes smaller intervals may be required in areas of disruption.
Collar Sheet
In the Collar sheet, the drillhole name and geotechnical logger details can be
edited. A new drillhole can be added by completing the HOLEID box and
changing the Update Mode to Insert Mode.
As outlined above, a standard logging interval can be set, which will be carried
across to all sheets to facilitate interval style logging. Domain style logging is
active without this setting allowing the logger to freely vary intervals across
sheets and between individual logged entries on a sheet. Note, even with a
preset interval selection, intervals are still editable on individual sheets.
Core Recovery
* core loss interval needs to be recorded as close as possible to the hole depth where loss has occurred.
RQD
RQD cont.
Measured as a percentage of the drill core in lengths of 10 cm or more
25-50% poor
50-75% fair
75-90% good
90-100% excellent
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
mw Moderately Weathered: Less than half of the rock material is decomposed and/or disintegrated to soil
sw Slightly Weathered: Discolouration indicates weathering rock material and defect surfaces
Weathering cont. - examples
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
R0 Extremely weak; [UCS] 0.25-1MPa Indented by thumbnail; Easily remoulded by hand to a material with soil properties
R1 Very weak; [UCS] 1-5Mpa Crumbles under firm blows of geological pick, can be shaped/peeled with knife
Weak; [UCS] 5-25MPa Knife cuts, but to hard to shape into triaxial specimens; Can be peeled with a knife with
R2
difficulty
R3 Medium strong; [UCS] 25-50MPa Firm blow with geological pick indents rock to 5 mm; knife just scrapes the surface
R4 Strong; [UCS] 50-100MPa Hand held specimens broken by a single blow of a geological hammer
R5 Very strong; [UCS] 100-250MPa Requires many blows of a geological hammer to break intact rock specimens
R6 Extremely strong; [UCS]>250MPa Rock material only chipped under repeated hammer blows, rings when struck
S3 Firm Clay; [UCS] 0.05-0.10MPa Can be penetrated several inches by thumb with moderate effort
S4 Stiff Clay; [UCS] 0.10-0.25MPa Readily indented by thumb but penetrated only with great effort
Any observations made on the hydrogeology from the core should be recorded;
yellow-brown and orange zones appearing lower in the profile can indicate old
redox frontsgenerally related to paleo or perched water tables.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
B Bottom, reference line position: along the (B)ottom of the hole
T Top, reference line position: along the (T)op of the hole
Ori Reliability :
Orientation Reliability Rating denotes the reliability of the orientation data over the specified interval. Where
R3 is selected, beta is not required. Alpha is required for all reliability options where discontinuities are logged.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
R1 Traverse line: solid reference line with +2 ori marks
R2 Extrapolated line: reference line dashed; 1 ori mark; broken zone present
R3 No measure: no reference line marked
nl Field not logged
na Field not applicable
Discontinuity cont.
Jn - Joint Sets:
The number of sets is a critical parameter as it gives a guide as to the blocky nature of the ground.
This field is compulsory. Each distinctive set is counted based on its alpha angle to core axis and beta angle where
available and joint characteristics. Orientations for similar joint sets are never perfectly aligned; hence joints that are within
10 of each other can be treated as the same set as long as they display the same joint fill and surface characteristics.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
mnf Massive, no or few joints
js1 One joint set
jr1 One joint set plus random
js2 Two joint sets
jr2 Two joint sets plus random
js3 Three joint sets
jr3 Three joint sets plus random
js4 Four or more joint sets, random, heavily jointed, 'sugar cube'
mnf Massive, no or few joints
cre Crushed rock, earth like
nl field not logged
na field not applicable
Discontinuity cont.
Microfractures:
Microfractures are small scale discontinuities in
the rock that have not experienced significant
movement or contain visible infill material.
They may form a network of fractures visible
only as wet traces on partially dry core.
Microfractures may open during drilling or with
core handling but are closed when in situ. This
information is important for caving studies.
This field is not compulsory.
Partially dry core indicating microfractures
VERY LOW : Rare
microfracturing (1-3/m)
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
Very Low Rare microfracturing (1-3/m) LOW: Microfractures present
with no interconnectivity
Low Microfractures present with no interconnectivity (3-10/m) (3-10/m)
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
Vn0 0 veinlets/m
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
Type: Structure type is the primary identifier of the type and nature of the structure being recorded.
* The weakest set should be described as Set 1.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
J Joint: Discontinuities appearing at cracks or fractures in the rock along which there has been no or little displacement
V Vein: joints, diaclases or other types of discontinuities sealed with one or more filling materials
Foliation Planes: discontinuities present in metamorphic folded rocks associated with the bedding of the original
FP rock/laminated minerals/preferential orientation
Schistosity Planes: foliation planes in schists or other schistose rocks, associated with the presence of planar minerals,
SP usually micas
B Bedding: discontinuities determined by changes in one or more factors during the sedimentation of bedded rocks
Fault: discontinuity associated with a shear failure plane that shows clear signs of differential movements in the rock
F mass, on either of their walls
Shear Zone: zone associated to a fault (or delimited by two faults), containing blocks with relative displacements, but no
SZ visible faults
FZ Fault Zone: zone where a group of parallel faults occurs with little space between them
C Contact: surface along which one rock unit touches another- depositional, intrusive or fault contacts
BZ Broken Zone: A zone of disturbed/broken ground along the core
DSC Core Discing: Geotechnical features such as stress induced core discing. Refer to figure xx
nl Field not logged
na Field not applicable
Discontinuity cont. examples of Fault Zone
Discontinuity cont. example of Fault Zone
Discontinuity cont. Discing & Fault
Core Position:
Structure-Core Position. This refers to the position of the structure surface angle being measured with
respect to (T)op of the Bottom stick or the (B)ottom of the Top stick looking down the hole. May vary
depending on which core stick is used to measure beta so required for each set (refer to section on
measurements with a Goniometer)
A default nl entry is applied. T should only be entered if the Top of the bottom stick is used and beta is not
corrected by 180 degrees.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
B Bottom, Structure-Core Position: (B)ottom of the Top stick looking down the hole
T Top, Structure-Core Position: (T)op of the Bottom stick looking down the hole
nl field not logged
na field not applicable
Discontinuity cont. - Set 1-4 data collection
Alpha angle:
The smaller of the two angles between the maximum
dip vector of the logged structure and the long core
axis. Actual measurements are required within an
accuracy of 10 degrees. Alpha angles range from 0 to
90.
Beta angle:
Looking down the hole, the clockwise angle from the
bottom-of-hole line to the bottom of the ellipse of the
measured structure. Again actual measurements are
required within an accuracy of 10 degrees. Beta
angles range from 0 to 360.
Discontinuity cont. - Set 1-4 data collection
Roughness:
Describes the nature of the wall of the discontinuity from core exposure.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
rou Rough or irregular - a surface that has a rough sand papery feel to it when rubbed
smo Smooth - the equivalent of a table top feel to it when rubbed
sli Slickensided the equivalent of a highly polished surface feel to it when rubbed
gou Gouge filled with clay minerals - assumed to be thick enough to prevent rock wall contact for the Q classification system.
crz Sandy, gravelly or crushed zone - assumed to be thick enough to prevent rock wall contact for the Q classification system.
nl field not logged
na field not applicable
Shape:
Shape field describes the shape of the wall of the discontinuity from core exposure.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
U Undulating
P Planar
Infill:
The type of fracture infill. Infill is the material present on the surface of a discontinuity.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
F Friction materials: sand, silt calcite (non-softening): Ja=4 (part wall contact)
H Hard cohesive materials: compacted filling of clay, chlorite, talc: Ja=6 (pwc)
S Soft cohesive materials: medium to low over consolidated clay, chlorite, talc: Ja=8 (pwc)
C Swelling clay materials: filling material exhibits swelling properties (montmorillonite): Ja=10 (pwc)
N No infill present
Alteration:
The degree of fracture wall alteration.
LOOKUP DESCRIPTION
"Healed Wall: None or tightly healed or hard, non-softening impermeable, unweathered filling (eg. quartz, epidote): Ja=0.75
non (joint wall contact)"
Can't scratch with a knife
"Fresh Wall: Unaltered joint walls with unweathered surface staining only, no coating or filling: Ja=1 (jwc)"
una Can scratch with a knife
"Slight Alteration: Slightly altered or weathered joint walls, hard mineral coating, may include small clay free sandy particles:
sli Ja=2 (jwc)"
Can scratch with finger nail
Friction Coating: Silty or sandy clay coating, small clay fraction (low friction coating, non-softening): Ja=3 (jwc)"
mod Can't indent with finger nail
"Cohesive Coating: Soft infill including low friction clay, platy micas, talc, gypsum, carbonates and graphite (softening): Ja=4
sof (jwc)"
Can indent with finger nail
crz "Bands of disintegrated or crushed rock and clay (no wall contact), Ja=5 (F fill type), Ja=8 (H), Ja=10 (S), Ja=12 (C)"
cly "Thick, continuous zones or bands of clay (nwc), Ja=13 (H filltype), Ja=17 (S), Ja=20 (C)"
Fill Thickness:
The width is the thickness of the infill where infill is material present on the surface of a discontinuity
[mm]. This can be an estimated value for each joint set.
This sheet captures any validation completed on the core logging. Quality control
of geotechnical logging, as with all logging data initially lies with the data logger,
i.e. to run through the log for any typographic errors or out of the ordinary
numbers.
The lead geotechnical engineer should specify the required detail of logging and
complete a final quality check of the data.
Validation fields captured should include comments outlining how the validation
was undertaken (photos, core tray) together with the name of the engineer who
completed the validation.
Graphical
Data entered via the sheets is displayed in the Graphical Log and vice versa. Data can
also be entered via the graphical log. Lithology and Alteration sheets are exported from
the main database and are read-only.
Dip Direction angle is read from the face of the compass for one of the two needles
Red or Black. The dip measurement point on the side of the compass indicates which
needle to read from either red of black. Once you know which needle to read, read the
dip direction from the face of the compass.
Compass side
Compass Face
Core Orientation alpha & beta angles
Plexiglass Goniometer
Goniometer cont.
Goniometer Alpha & Beta angles measurement Goniometer - Alpha angle measurement
Goniometer cont.
INDIVIDUAL FAULTS
Hierarchy #2
Fault
#1
INTERNAL FAULT
FAULT ZONE
ELEMENTS
Hierarchy #1 Fault Hierarchy #3
#2
Fault
#3
Hierarchy two
internal fault plane
Hierarchy one