gmcnair - first off, as a matter of course (unless you carry out extensive testing and know what you are doing), I wouldn't put a foundation on topsoil. You have indicated 24inches of it and yet designed the footing to go down only 16 inches. Why no have put the footing down the 24 inches - and then, what is the frost depth of your site? This needs to be addressed as well. You've indicated the underlying material to be a damp grey clay. The greyness tells me that it is below the groundwater level at the site - as a general rule for if clays were above they would be brownish in colour or desiccated. Now the grey clay may be pretty good stuff or pretty poor stuff. I have "damp grey clay" on one of my sites with only 300psf undrained shear strength. I've had other sites where "damp grey clay" has undrained shear strengths greater than 1000 psf. Your friend pushed his rod through the topsoil - what do you expect other than easy pushing? The point is, that you:
(1) have to provide for frost protection (3 to 4 ft unless you are below mid-level USA - can be confirmed with your local building department or through general textbooks (viz., Bowles);
(2) you need to have proper bearing values determined of the material that your foundation will
sit on - and for a four foot wide footing, you should confirm to depths of about 3 to 4 ft. below the footing founding level.
(3) you need to ensure that you have some embedment of the footing - topsoil will not give you much, if any lateral embedment protection. A footing founded at ground surface has better chance of tilting than one embedded.
If it were I, I would suggest you get some labourers - young kids - have then dig a hole about 1m by 1m to the top of the "damp grey clay". Carefully trim to this level. Then you can use the "thumb" test to see if the material is "soft", "firm" or "stiff". (this info is also in OSHA excavation literature). Then, I would dig down another foot and repeat. Do this to about 3 feet into the "damp grey clay." If the "thumb tests shows you are in firm soil, then with Su in the order of 700psf, you should be able to get 1500psf bearing pressure. But, if you are not comfortable in this - by all means get a geotechnical engineer involved. Remember your reputation is on the line.
Are you a PE?? How did this get by the building department for a building permit without a proper estimation of the soil's bearing ability? If you are not a PE, how can you design the wall? You see all the time where engineer's are brought up to task because of things like this - and if you are not a PE, be very careful.
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