Drilling Rig Feeding Pipe into the Borehole for the West Point Extensometer
Detailed Description
In order to construct the borehole extensometer at West Point, 1420 feet of 7 inch steel casing was fed into the ground using the drilling rig, as pictured here. This steel casing allows the borehole to hold its shape and not collapse in on itself, and isolates the 2 inch thick extensometer rod from the surrounding sediments.
Sources/Usage
Public Domain.
Related
The Virginia Extensometer Network
Borehole extensometers are instruments that monitor land subsidence caused by aquifer compaction. They provide precise, high-resolution measurements of changes in aquifer-system thickness. These changes in aquifer-system thickness contribute to vertical land motion (VLM) across the Virginia Coastal Plain, and are driven primarily by groundwater level decline due to human water usage. The Virginia...
Land Subsidence on the Virginia Coastal Plain
Land subsidence is a loss of ground elevation, often experienced as the ground slowly sinking over the course of years. In eastern Virginia, high rates of groundwater use is a major factor in the land subsidence affecting the area. The Virginia-West Virginia Water Science Center, with the help of our partners, has been monitoring land subsidence in the Virginia Coastal Plain since 1979 using a...
The West Point Extensometer
The West Point Extensometer

Geologists Monitoring Sediment during West Point Extensometer Drilling

Drilling Rig Feeding Pipe into the Borehole for the West Point Extensometer
Related
The Virginia Extensometer Network
Borehole extensometers are instruments that monitor land subsidence caused by aquifer compaction. They provide precise, high-resolution measurements of changes in aquifer-system thickness. These changes in aquifer-system thickness contribute to vertical land motion (VLM) across the Virginia Coastal Plain, and are driven primarily by groundwater level decline due to human water usage. The Virginia...
Land Subsidence on the Virginia Coastal Plain
Land subsidence is a loss of ground elevation, often experienced as the ground slowly sinking over the course of years. In eastern Virginia, high rates of groundwater use is a major factor in the land subsidence affecting the area. The Virginia-West Virginia Water Science Center, with the help of our partners, has been monitoring land subsidence in the Virginia Coastal Plain since 1979 using a...
The West Point Extensometer
The West Point Extensometer

Geologists Monitoring Sediment during West Point Extensometer Drilling

Drilling Rig Feeding Pipe into the Borehole for the West Point Extensometer