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Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis

During the 2020-2021 South African National Antarctic Programme Antarctic resupply voyage, a Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey was conducted on the Fimbul ice shelf edge to determine a safe cargo offloading zone from the SA Agulhas II ship. The survey showed subsurface cracks which created conce...

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Main Author: Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu
Other Authors: Kalumba, Denis
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Civil Engineering 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu
author2 Kalumba, Denis
author_browse Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu
Kalumba, Denis
author_facet Kalumba, Denis
Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu
author_sort Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu
collection Thesis
description During the 2020-2021 South African National Antarctic Programme Antarctic resupply voyage, a Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey was conducted on the Fimbul ice shelf edge to determine a safe cargo offloading zone from the SA Agulhas II ship. The survey showed subsurface cracks which created concerns of shelf failure, risking the lives of crew and the ship stationed at the bottom of the cliff. To assess the risk of failure, this study was carried out to quantify the stability of the vertical cliff. A slope stability analysis model was required to achieve this, which in turn needed inputs such as cliff geometry and ice material properties. Therefore, laboratory tests to obtain these properties preceded the cliff modelling. Ice cores were retrieved from the shelf, and these were observed to be granular in structure, with different grainsizes and ice lenses. The analysis began with a core characterisation based on the grainsize percentages, ice lens concentrations, and due to ice's relationship to rock, Rock Quality Designation (RQD) of the cores. The grainsize segmentation was fine, medium, and large grained, with medium grained being the most abundant in the cores. The ice lens concentrations showed areas on the ice shelf with high meltwater which were to be avoided. The physical properties needed were density, elastic modulus, and Poisson's ratio. The mass/volume method was used to obtain an average density of 569.9±157.7kg/m3 . The elastic modulus and Poisson's ratio were both tested using ultrasonic methods to give 1.66±0.87GPa and 0.37±0.06 respectively. Each of the values were comparable to values mentioned in literature with the granular ice lying between the stiffnesses of snow ice structures and crystalline ice. The strength value tested was Uniaxial Compressive Strength (UCS), with shear strength and tensile strength determined afterwards. The UCS tests gave a value of 0.9±0.27MPa. The compression was carried out at a strain rate of 10-4.3 s -1 for ductile failure. Shear strength was then determined using the Rock Mass Rating (RMR) method, giving cohesion and friction angle readings of 0.25MPa and 30. The shear strength was then calculated to 0.77MPa. The tensile strength was equal to the ice bond strength, which was equal to the cohesion value of 0.25MPa. Modelling was then embarked for a base scenario, horizontal crack variation, and vertical crack depth variation scenario. The base critical Factor of Safety (FS) was 5.56. Failure occurred in both tension and shear, through the Mohr Coulomb failure criterion. In the horizontal variation, the critical crack zone lay between 9 - 20m away from the shelf edge with the lowest FS of 4.24 at 13m. The failure types observed were toppling failure, planar failure, crumbling of the overhanging part of the ice. Finally, the increasing crack depth at the critical horizontal location led to decrease in FS. The scenarios output FS values showing that the ice shelf cliff is safe. Despite this, the models run were an oversimplification of the entire shelf with a number of factors assumed due to the unavailability of data. To provide a detailed analysis of the entire ice shelf, a thorough survey of the entire shelf would need to be carried out to provide accurate layering data, precise material properties at depth, actual crack locations and dimensions on the shelf edge.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:19.547Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Civil Engineering
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40885 Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu Kalumba, Denis MacHutchon, Keith Skatulla, Sebastian Govender, Reuben Engineering During the 2020-2021 South African National Antarctic Programme Antarctic resupply voyage, a Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey was conducted on the Fimbul ice shelf edge to determine a safe cargo offloading zone from the SA Agulhas II ship. The survey showed subsurface cracks which created concerns of shelf failure, risking the lives of crew and the ship stationed at the bottom of the cliff. To assess the risk of failure, this study was carried out to quantify the stability of the vertical cliff. A slope stability analysis model was required to achieve this, which in turn needed inputs such as cliff geometry and ice material properties. Therefore, laboratory tests to obtain these properties preceded the cliff modelling. Ice cores were retrieved from the shelf, and these were observed to be granular in structure, with different grainsizes and ice lenses. The analysis began with a core characterisation based on the grainsize percentages, ice lens concentrations, and due to ice's relationship to rock, Rock Quality Designation (RQD) of the cores. The grainsize segmentation was fine, medium, and large grained, with medium grained being the most abundant in the cores. The ice lens concentrations showed areas on the ice shelf with high meltwater which were to be avoided. The physical properties needed were density, elastic modulus, and Poisson's ratio. The mass/volume method was used to obtain an average density of 569.9±157.7kg/m3 . The elastic modulus and Poisson's ratio were both tested using ultrasonic methods to give 1.66±0.87GPa and 0.37±0.06 respectively. Each of the values were comparable to values mentioned in literature with the granular ice lying between the stiffnesses of snow ice structures and crystalline ice. The strength value tested was Uniaxial Compressive Strength (UCS), with shear strength and tensile strength determined afterwards. The UCS tests gave a value of 0.9±0.27MPa. The compression was carried out at a strain rate of 10-4.3 s -1 for ductile failure. Shear strength was then determined using the Rock Mass Rating (RMR) method, giving cohesion and friction angle readings of 0.25MPa and 30. The shear strength was then calculated to 0.77MPa. The tensile strength was equal to the ice bond strength, which was equal to the cohesion value of 0.25MPa. Modelling was then embarked for a base scenario, horizontal crack variation, and vertical crack depth variation scenario. The base critical Factor of Safety (FS) was 5.56. Failure occurred in both tension and shear, through the Mohr Coulomb failure criterion. In the horizontal variation, the critical crack zone lay between 9 - 20m away from the shelf edge with the lowest FS of 4.24 at 13m. The failure types observed were toppling failure, planar failure, crumbling of the overhanging part of the ice. Finally, the increasing crack depth at the critical horizontal location led to decrease in FS. The scenarios output FS values showing that the ice shelf cliff is safe. Despite this, the models run were an oversimplification of the entire shelf with a number of factors assumed due to the unavailability of data. To provide a detailed analysis of the entire ice shelf, a thorough survey of the entire shelf would need to be carried out to provide accurate layering data, precise material properties at depth, actual crack locations and dimensions on the shelf edge. 2025-02-07T07:03:35Z 2025-02-07T07:03:35Z 2024 2025-02-07T07:01:04Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40885 eng application/pdf Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Engineering
Econi, Jonathan Arthur Olivu
Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
title_full Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
title_fullStr Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
title_full_unstemmed Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
title_short Investigated physical/strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
title_sort investigated physical strength properties and elastic constants of fimbul granular ice applied to ice cliff stability analysis
topic Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40885
work_keys_str_mv AT econijonathanarthurolivu investigatedphysicalstrengthpropertiesandelasticconstantsoffimbulgranulariceappliedtoicecliffstabilityanalysis