anzineer
Geotechnical
- Sep 30, 2003
- 3
Around our office, I've heard these phrases used occasionally. 'Standard of care' is used when determining the appropriate work scope for evaluating a site and providing recommendations. 'Industry accepted practices' is used when making recommendations, assessing construction conditions, and providing peer review/forensic evaluation. Both can be used in most any scenario though, I suppose.
Who determines the definition of such things for geotechnical engineering? Are they local/regional/state/national? Are they in writing? I've dealt with difficult conditions in karst geology and have resorted to doing alot of online reading to see how others tackle similar problems. However, most papers require expensive subscriptions, so it's difficult to learn what's been done in similar scenarios.
As a side question, what the best way to get access to papers/journals, proceedings, ect that deal with geotechnical engineering in karst? I'm sure I'll have to subscribe to something and I was thinking that ASCE's library might be the best, but do you still have to pay for every paper/journal? Is there anything that gives you access to everything once you subscribe?
Thanks for reading.
Who determines the definition of such things for geotechnical engineering? Are they local/regional/state/national? Are they in writing? I've dealt with difficult conditions in karst geology and have resorted to doing alot of online reading to see how others tackle similar problems. However, most papers require expensive subscriptions, so it's difficult to learn what's been done in similar scenarios.
As a side question, what the best way to get access to papers/journals, proceedings, ect that deal with geotechnical engineering in karst? I'm sure I'll have to subscribe to something and I was thinking that ASCE's library might be the best, but do you still have to pay for every paper/journal? Is there anything that gives you access to everything once you subscribe?
Thanks for reading.