A model levee resting atop soft compressible peaty organic soil in the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta was shaken by forced vibration to study the seismic deformation potential of the underlying peat and measure dynamic levee-peat interaction. Forced vibration testing occurred over a frequency range of 0 to 5 Hz and produced force amplitudes applied to the embankment crest that induced elastic to nonlinear levee-foundation responses. Available data include acceleration records from sensors mounted on the model levee and on the ground surface near the model levee, and acceleration and pore pressure measurements from sensors embedded in the underlying peat. A remote data acquisition system measured settlements and pore pressures over a span of more than a year, encompassing time before and after the dynamic testing. Small pore pressures were generated in the peat during testing although embankment settlements from cyclic loading were small.
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