Long-term time-lapse microgravity and geotechnical monitoring of relict salt mines, Marston, Cheshire, U. K.

Pringle, Jamie and Styles, Peter and Howell, Claire P. and Branston, Michael W. and Furner, Rebecca and Toon, Sam (2012) Long-term time-lapse microgravity and geotechnical monitoring of relict salt mines, Marston, Cheshire, U. K. GEOPHYSICS, 77 (6). B287-B294. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1190/geo2011-0491.1

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Official URL: http://eprints.keele.ac.uk/156/

Abstract

The area around the town of Northwich in Cheshire, U. K., has a long history of catastrophic ground subsidence caused by a combination of natural dissolution and collapsing abandoned mine workings within the underlying Triassic halite bedrock geology. In the village of Marston, the Trent and Mersey Canal crosses several abandoned salt mine workings and previously subsiding areas, the canal being breached by a catastrophic subsidence event in 1953. This canal section is the focus of a long-term monitoring study by conventional geotechnical topographic and microgravity surveys. Results of 20 years of topographic time-lapse surveys indicate specific areas of local subsidence that could not be predicted by available site and mine abandonment plan and shaft data. Subsidence has subsequently necessitated four phases of temporary canal bank remediation. Ten years of microgravity time-lapse data have recorded major deepening negative anomalies in specific sections that correlate with topographic data. Gravity 2D modeling using available site data found upwardly propagating voids, and associated collapse material produced a good match with observed microgravity data. Intrusive investigations have confirmed a void at the major anomaly. The advantages of undertaking such long-term studies for near-surface geophysicists, geotechnical engineers, and researchers working in other application areas are discussed.

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Item Type: Article
Subjects: Methodology > Other-additional study
Region > UK > Cheshire
Inducing technology > Underground mining
Project: EPOS-IP > NORTHWICH: underground salt extraction cavities