Geology..may need some help here.

   / Geology..may need some help here. #1  

Sutol

Gold Member
Joined
Dec 14, 2011
Messages
463
Location
Cheshire England UK
Tractor
Ford 1200 / Super Dexta x 2
Geology..
We live on top of a hill but there is a hollow which always floods after a wet spell.
I believe that the reason for this is a layer of undulating clay under the top soil which holds the water in a sort of bowl and prevents it draining away.

Am I making sense ?

We have dug down 18 feet and got through the clay (this in the hollow) and struck sandstone.

Now we have a large deep hole with a sandstone bottom which we intend to fill with rubble.

Question is will this stop the flooding ? will the water drain away through the sandstone and on down hill away from us

Thanks:):)
 
   / Geology..may need some help here. #2  
Geology..
We live on top of a hill but there is a hollow which always floods after a wet spell.
I believe that the reason for this is a layer of undulating clay under the top soil which holds the water in a sort of bowl and prevents it draining away.

Am I making sense ?

We have dug down 18 feet and got through the clay (this in the hollow) and struck sandstone.

Now we have a large deep hole with a sandstone bottom which we intend to fill with rubble.

Question is will this stop the flooding ? will the water drain away through the sandstone and on down hill away from us

Thanks:):)

Am pretty sure you are on the right track. Depending on how big the area that you want to drain, be sure to uncover enough of the sandstone for it to drain.

Around my place at about 4 to 5 feet I hit what I call a separation layer. Its an open type of coleche (spelling ??), once it is uncovered you can run a hose in it full blast and never fill.

About 1/2 mile away I had to go down around 10' for the same thing.
 
   / Geology..may need some help here.
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Thanks for the reply, we only uncovered about 10 feet by 8 feet and the hole is approx 15 feet deep.
The floor is sandstone and the machine broke the surface of it chipping the top couple of inches off.
We dropped about three tons of old brick and conctete pieces in but need tons more.:)
 
   / Geology..may need some help here. #4  
I am not a geologist but introducing water into stratum that is not use to
it could have undesirable effects, as in slippage or creating a sink hole over
time or if you are on a well, it could add run off full of pesticides etc
into your aquafir. I would take good pics and post up on a geologist forum w/ coords and get some pro input. What do I know? :confused2:
 
   / Geology..may need some help here.
  • Thread Starter
#5  
I am not a geologist but introducing water into stratum that is not use to
it could have undesirable effects, as in slippage or creating a sink hole over
time or if you are on a well, it could add run off full of pesticides etc
into your aquafir. I would take good pics and post up on a geologist forum w/ coords and get some pro input. What do I know? :confused2:

You may be right,

eighteen foot hole now has six feet of water in the bottom (where else:laughing:)
I asume that the water is draining out of the surrounding land quicker than it can escape through the sandstone base.

Please tell me I'm right:)
 
   / Geology..may need some help here.
  • Thread Starter
#6  
Just as a matter of interest and maybe help sort out why ect

The house is built on sandstone and is approx 100yds from the hole.

Sandstone is a few feet below the house.

A well has been dug (in 1800's) outside the house and I have been down it. The well is brick lined for about four feet then is cut out of sandstone down for thirty feet. The bottom has a few feet of pure clean water in it and is a bowl cut into sandstone. Its about four feet in diameter all the way down.

The land falls away from the house and is approx six feet lower at the hole but the sandstone there is eighteen feet down so the sandstone must be a shelf that drops twelve feet in 100 yds.


BUT.... how come the well only fills to about 25 feet or so below the house yet the water in the hole is up now around eeerrrr.+ divide by eerrrr take away 12.....just answered my own question aprox twenty five feet below the level of the house, that must be saturation level of the sandstone..

Make a geologist yet:laughing:

Could not see how a well would work on top of a hill but the sandstone must suck the water up, thats my guess anyways.:)
 
   / Geology..may need some help here. #7  
Not sure about England, but around here there are many types of
sandstone. Some is porous, some not. Some hard, some soft. Some
good for building foundations, some not.

But if you are now introducing surface water into a former ground water
area, you may inadvertently contaminate the drinking water if your well
is not very far away. That would be my main concern if I lived there.
Surface water can have many contaminants - fecal matter, oils, etc. that
now has less layers to filter through.

If it is a bowl area you truly need drained, you may just want to put in a
subsurface tile with gravel on top (we call it a french drain) and outlet it
outside the bowl if there is sufficient fall and not too big of a hill to cut
through. Most 4 inch plastic tile can only handle around 6 feet of cover
in most cases. Clay, concrete, etc. can handle much more cover. Won't
go into much more detail here, but there are several places to get further
information on subsurface drainage. Again, my main concern would be
a possible contamination of the groundwater for the well. Good luck.
 
   / Geology..may need some help here.
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Not sure about England, but around here there are many types of
sandstone. Some is porous, some not. Some hard, some soft. Some
good for building foundations, some not.

But if you are now introducing surface water into a former ground water
area, you may inadvertently contaminate the drinking water if your well
is not very far away. That would be my main concern if I lived there.
Surface water can have many contaminants - fecal matter, oils, etc. that
now has less layers to filter through.

If it is a bowl area you truly need drained, you may just want to put in a
subsurface tile with gravel on top (we call it a french drain) and outlet it
outside the bowl if there is sufficient fall and not too big of a hill to cut
through. Most 4 inch plastic tile can only handle around 6 feet of cover
in most cases. Clay, concrete, etc. can handle much more cover. Won't
go into much more detail here, but there are several places to get further
information on subsurface drainage. Again, my main concern would be
a possible contamination of the groundwater for the well. Good luck.


Draining the bowl is out of the question because the only easy way is out across neighbours land and he has threatened to shoot our ducks if they stray on to his land, nasty grumpy old farmer who I used to play with as a kid, funny how people change as they grow older.

We dont use the well for drinking, in fact we aint used it at all in a fair while.

The water in the hole is stable at about the level of the water in the well so I'm thinking that the level will remain pretty constant now the base is sandstone and not clay.
Time will tell and thanks for your valuable input you all :)
 
   / Geology..may need some help here. #9  
I am not a geologist but introducing water into stratum that is not use to
it could have undesirable effects, as in slippage or creating a sink hole over
time or if you are on a well, it could add run off full of pesticides etc
into your aquafir. I would take good pics and post up on a geologist forum w/ coords and get some pro input. What do I know? :confused2:

I agree with everything stated.

Is there a problem leaving the water in the depression?
Where is your drinking water obtained.
Sewer location?
What is downhill from you?
 
   / Geology..may need some help here.
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I agree with everything stated.

Is there a problem leaving the water in the depression?
Where is your drinking water obtained.
Sewer location?
What is downhill from you?

Water in depression is a pond when the weather is wet and dry when the weather dry.
When depression has water in it the surrounding land is wet, wet enough for the tractor to sink in places and we live on top of a hill.

The well isn't used any more and we use mains sewerage

Downhill is farm land on all sides, not ours I might add.

Hoping the land will drain quickly now after a wet spell:)
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2023 Bobcat E32i Mini Excavator (A51573)
2023 Bobcat E32i...
(1) HD 24ft Free Standing Corral Panel with 7ft Gate (A51573)
(1) HD 24ft Free...
MANTIS 155B LOT NUMBER 230 (A53084)
MANTIS 155B LOT...
2001 INTERNATIONAL 2574 6X4 DUMP TRUCK (A51406)
2001 INTERNATIONAL...
2015 Jeep Wrangler Multipurpose Vehicle (MPV), VIN # 1C4BJWEG5FL757630 (A51572)
2015 Jeep Wrangler...
2016 R&R Products 331 LP Reel Mower (A51691)
2016 R&R Products...
 
Top