Sjotroll
Geotechnical
- Jan 2, 2018
- 29
Hi,
I was thinking and I came to something that confused me. I will tell you my line of though so please tell me if I went wrong somewhere, and if not I'd appreciate an explanation.
So, my first assumption was that soil under the water table is fully saturated.
The second assumption was that the liquid limit can't be higher than the maximum water content.
Which means that fine grained soils that are under the water table (saturated) are in a liquid state. And this confused me because I don't think that's the case. So what is actually happening here? Did I go somewhere wrong or is there something I didn't take into consideration?
The only possible anwswer that I see is that soils under the water table aren't fully saturated.
I was thinking and I came to something that confused me. I will tell you my line of though so please tell me if I went wrong somewhere, and if not I'd appreciate an explanation.
So, my first assumption was that soil under the water table is fully saturated.
The second assumption was that the liquid limit can't be higher than the maximum water content.
Which means that fine grained soils that are under the water table (saturated) are in a liquid state. And this confused me because I don't think that's the case. So what is actually happening here? Did I go somewhere wrong or is there something I didn't take into consideration?
The only possible anwswer that I see is that soils under the water table aren't fully saturated.