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TECHNICAL MEMORANDUM <br /> Page 7 <br /> June 3, 1992 <br /> SAC31583.AC.ZZ <br /> encountered in Boring B -2 at an approximate depth of 19 feet. This layer <br /> was not encountered in other borings and is believed to be discontinuous. <br /> A 5- to 10-foot layer of very stiff yellowish-brown lean clay. This material is <br /> moist, with moisture contents between the plastic and liquid limit. A <br /> consolidation test indicates that this material is consolidated to approximately <br /> three times the effective overburden stress (OCR of 3). The overconsolidation <br /> ratio (OCR) is the ratio of the maximum effective stress the soil has been <br /> subjected to in the past (preconsolidation pressure) to the existing effective <br /> stress in the soil. A UU_ tri 'al compression test at an approximate depth of <br /> 34 feet in Boring BH-1 indicated a shear strength of 2,286 psf. <br /> A 30- to 36-foot layer of very dense sandy material. This material ranged from <br /> silty and clayey sand to poorly graded and well graded sand. Within this layer, <br /> zones of very stiff lean clay (UU shear strength of 3,302 psf) were encountered <br /> in Borings B14-1 and B -2 at approximate depths of 50 feet and 64 feet. This <br /> material has an approximate OCR of 1.4. <br /> A 30-foot layer of material consisting of very stiff to hard silt and lean clay. <br /> This material is moist to wet, with moisture contents between the plastic and <br /> liquid limit. This material has an approximate OCR of 1.7 (Boring BH-1, <br /> approximate depth 78 feet). <br /> Very dense poorly graded sand was observed near the bottom of Boring BH-1. <br /> starting approximately at a depth of 100 feet. Sand was also observed in <br /> Emcon's Boring No. 17 to the maximum depth drilled of 178 feet (EMCON, <br /> 1972). <br /> Soil type and propertie4 of the materials encountered in the geotechnical explorations <br /> performed by EMCON and Insitu-Tech were generally consistent with the conditions <br /> described above. In EMCON's subsurface exploration, a Modified California Sampler (with <br /> a 140-pound hammer with a 30-inch drop) was used to collect samples. Blow-counts <br /> recorded with the Modified California Sampler typically ranged from 20 to 60 blows per <br /> foot. Unconfined compression strength tests performed on silty clay samples between depths <br /> of 3 to 10 feet ranged from 1,310 psf to 5,100 psf (3,000 psf average shear strength) <br /> (EMCON, 1972). The shear strength is defined as one half of the deviator stress at failure. <br /> Shear strength based on Insitu-Tech's CPT data (performed to a maximum depth of 50 feet) <br />