Participate
Share your datasets and applications with the open data community
The soil mechanical maps were drawn up by the Centre for Soil Mechanical Mapping of Ghent University and the Working Group or Commission for Soil Mechanical Mapping (several authors) and published under the auspices of the National Institute for Soil Mechanics. Quote from the explanatory texts to the ground mechanical maps: "The soil mechanical maps respond to a need for a summary of those components of the geological environment that play a role in land use and influence the design, construction and maintenance of buildings. However, the data provided should not be given absolute accuracy due to the interpolations made when compiling them. The maps provide information on the general geological and soil mechanical condition of the subsoil as it can be deduced from the tests available at the time of the mapping. They are therefore only guiding documents and the authors cannot be held responsible for their possible applications. The soil-mechanical maps cannot under any circumstances exempt the user from carrying out additional tests in function of well-defined projects." The soil-mechanical map 15.3.7 Zwijndrecht-Burcht, Plate VI: Top of the Rupelian clay complex, scale 1:5000. Explanatory text Ground mechanical map 15.3.7 Zwijndrecht-Burcht (Ph. Van Burm and J. Maertens led by E. De Beer and W. De Breuck).
Share your datasets and applications with the open data community