Use of remote sensing to quantify construction material and to define geologic lineations. Part I. Dickey-Lincoln School Lakes Project, Maine. Special report
A potential site for construction of a series of earth dams and dikes with a maximum height of 335 ft, the Dickey-Lincoln School Lakes Project, is being evaluated by the New England Division, Corp of Engineers. The site is located on the St. John River in Aroostook County, Maine, approximately 30 miles west of the town of Ft. Kent. The project is primarily designed to generate hydroelectric power, but it is also intended to provide flood control. During November 1974 a study was initiated to apply state-of-the-art remote sensing techniques to the delineation and quantification of surficial geology units to locate construction material within the headwaters of the St. John River Basin. A photomosaic was prepared from 1966 black and white photography (scale 1:33,600). Fourteen surficial geology units were delineated in an 1100-square-mile area: alluvial fan, alluvial terrace, esker, floodplain, glacial moraine, kame, kame terrace, outwash, outwash terrace, bedrock, till, till over bedrock, wet outwash and wet till. These units were field checked and the depths estimated utilizing initial boring data, field measurements and seismometer values. Considerable time was saved using remote sensing techniques compared with conventional ground surveys. This comparison showed that the required construction material could be found within the prescribed area around the dam and dike sites. Because transportation of materials is a major cost in dam construction, the reduction in transportation distances determined from this study could result in considerable savings.
- Research Organization:
- Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab., Hanover, N.H. (USA)
- OSTI ID:
- 7247160
- Report Number(s):
- AD-A-023276; CRREL-SR-242-Pt-1
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: See also Part II, AD-A*023277
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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