Jmorgans1122
Geotechnical
- Dec 2, 2015
- 5
The contractor backfilled an area adjacent to a plinth beam with a 3/16 minus limestone material and will be supporting a slab on grade (I'm not sure if the fraction is exactly correct but the material had no large aggregate and was mostly fines). The material was placed in 8" lifts, compacted, and tested with a nuclear gauge. All test exceeded 98% compaction, using a standard proctor and had a moisture content of 1 to 2 percent below optimum. The area was untouched for a couple of months, exposed to several heavy rains. After the months of exposure to the weather, the contractor was preparing the subgrade for base rock when I noticed a soft spot in the area. After further investigation, the area was found to be completely saturated. The material went from a typical grey color, to almost a dark brown and lacked any stability. The entire depth of the limestone fill is basically mud at this point. Any ideas on why this happened? I know limestone is a porous material but would that explain why the area filled is now completely saturated? Thank you for any help.