San Francisco Bay Region Geology and Geologic Hazards
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A cooperative project with the California Geological Survey About Liquefaction What Is Liquefaction? How does it work: Where can it happen:
Typical effects of liquefaction include: loss of bearing strength –the ground can liquefy and lose its ability to support structures.
lateral spreading - the ground can slide down very gentle slopes or toward stream banks riding on a buried liquefied layer. sand boils - sand-laden water can be ejected from a buried liquefied layer and erupt at the surface to form sand volcanoes; the surrounding ground often fractures and settles.
flow failures — earth moves down steep slope with large displacement and much internal disruption of material.
Flow failure in highway fill, Lake Merced, 1957 Daly City earthquake (click to enlarge)
ground oscillation — the surface layer, riding on a buried liquefied layer, is thrown back and forth by the shaking and can be severely deformed. ![]() Walkway and pavement buckled by ground oscillation, Marina District of San Francisco, 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (click to enlarge)
flotation — light structures that are buried in the ground (like pipelines, sewers and nearly empty fuel tanks) can float to the surface when they are surrounded by liquefied soil.
settlement — when liquefied ground re-consolidates following an earthquake, the ground surface may settle or subside as shaking decreases and the underlying liquefied soil becomes more dense. ![]() Settlement and disruption of ground and pavement over filled ground, Dore Street, 1906 San Francisco earthquake (click to enlarge)
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