Geotechnical properties of soft clays from the Witch Ground Basin, central North Sea

Abstract The Witch Ground Basin to the northeast of Peterhead is occupied by Late to Postglacial clays which reach a maximum thickness of over forty metres. High resolution seismic surveys have shown that the Sediments can be divided into two stratigraphic units on the basis of their acoustic signatures: the upper Witch Ground Formation shows in its lower part a finely detailed pattern of laterally continuous multiple reflectors, whereas the lower Swatchway and Coal Pit Formations present a disorganised signature in which few reflectors are continuous. Profiles of bulk density, water content and undrained shear strength have been obtained from two continuously sampled, adjacent boreholes which penetrated the sediments to a depth of forty metres. These show that the deposits of the Witch Ground Basin comprise a single geotechnical unit with the properties expected of a fine grained sediment of glaciomarine origin. The principal geotechnical properties change gradationally as a result of changes in composition and from selfweight compression. The different seismic signatures on which the basin stratigraphy is based are not reflected by major geotechnical changes within the sediment, but may well result from secondary features of the geotechnical profile.