Decline in Slope Stability as a Consequence of Gassy Soil in Submarine Slopes on the Balearic Promontory

Submarine landslides can entail a substantial hazard for offshore infrastructure as they are capable of triggering tsunamis and may develop into highly mobile turbidity currents capable of breaking seabed cables. Despite considerable research activity, the trigger mechanisms for such landslide event...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kaminski, Pauline, Grabe, Jürgen, Sager, Thore F., Urlaub, Morelia
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: ASME 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/57343/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/57343/1/Kaminski-etal_OMAE2022-revisedManuscript.pdf
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Summary:Submarine landslides can entail a substantial hazard for offshore infrastructure as they are capable of triggering tsunamis and may develop into highly mobile turbidity currents capable of breaking seabed cables. Despite considerable research activity, the trigger mechanisms for such landslide events cannot be clearly defined. Recently, marine gas occurrence has been investigated as a possible trigger mechanism. The behaviour of a fine-grained gassy soil is influenced by a variety of micromechanical processes; amongst destructuring due to fracture formation or gas bubble expansion, and bubble flooding with subsequent cavity collapse. Capturing and modeling these processes in order to assess the destructive potential of enclosed gas bubbles in submarine slopes is to date a considerable scientific challenge. With the help of a large number of Finite Element Limit Analyses (FELA), which are based on laboratory tests on a gravity core from the western Mediterranean Sea, submarine slope stability in the respective region was evaluated. Based on these analyses, gassy soil can be defined as a preconditioning factor but not as a capable trigger mechanism for submarine landsliding.