Proceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences (Apr 2020)

Characterizing marshland compressibility by an in-situ loading test: design and set-up of an experiment in the Venice Lagoon

  • P. Teatini,
  • C. Da Lio,
  • L. Tosi,
  • A. Bergamasco,
  • S. Pasqual,
  • P. Simonini,
  • V. Girardi,
  • P. Zorzan,
  • C. Zoccarato,
  • M. Ferronato,
  • M. Roner,
  • M. Marani,
  • A. D'Alpaos,
  • S. Cola,
  • G. Zambon,
  • G. Zambon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-382-345-2020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 382
pp. 345 – 351

Abstract

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The fate of coastal marshlands in the near future will strongly depend on their capability to maintain their elevation above a rising mean sea level. Together with the deposition of inorganic sediments during high tides, organic soil production by halophytic vegetation, and organic matter decomposition, land subsidence due to natural soil compression is a major factor controlling the actual elevation of salt-marsh platforms. Due to their high porosity and compressibility, the marsh sedimentary body undergoes large compression because of the load of overlying more recent deposits. The characterization of the geotechnical properties of these deposits is therefore of paramount importance to quantify consolidation versus accretion and relative sea level rise. However, undisturbed sampling of this loose material is extremely challenging and lab tests on in-situ collected samples are not properly representative of in-situ conditions due to the scale effects in highly heterogeneous silty soils such as those of the Venice lagoon. To overcome this limitation, an in-situ loading test was carried out in the Lazzaretto Nuovo salt-marsh in the Venice Lagoon, Italy. The load is obtained by a number of plastic tanks that are filled with seawater, reaching a cumulative load of 40 kN applied on a 2.5×1.8 m2 surface. Specific instrumentations were deployed before positioning the tanks to measure soil vertical displacement at various depths below the load (0, 10, and 50 cm) and distances (0, 40, and 80 cm) from the load centre. Moreover, six pressure transducers were used to record overpressure dissipation over time. The collected datasets will be interpreted through a 3-D flow-deformation model that, once calibrated, provides reliable estimates of the compressibility values for each monitored depth interval.