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Methods of in situ Stress Measurement
1997Compared with other rock mass properties, rock stress is a difficult quantity to measure. As pointed out by Leeman (1959), ‘It is impossible to measure stress directly since, in fact, it is a fictitious quantity. It is only possible to deduce the stresses in a solid body from the results of measurements using some indirect method’.
Bernard Amadei, Ove Stephansson
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In Situ Stress Measurements in Austria
1980In situ stress measurements were made at 6 locations in Austria, which were chosen in such a fashion as to yield information on the neotectonic stress in the country. Because of a strong influence of the Alpine topography, it was necessary to apply finite-element calculations for the interpretation of the field results.
F. Kohlbeck +2 more
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In-Situ Evaluation of Compressive Stresses
1988The use of terra cotta as a cladding material emerged in the 1880s and began to decline in the late 1930s. During this period, high-rise buildings employing terra cotta cladding included no provisions for differential movement between the cladding and structural framing.
D Manmohan, RL Schwein, LA Wyllie
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Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering, 2021
Ding-Ping Xu, Quan Jiang, Shaojun Li
exaly
Ding-Ping Xu, Quan Jiang, Shaojun Li
exaly
International Journal of Mining Science and Technology, 2023
Hongwei Zhou, Mingyuan Lu, Wenhao Jia
exaly
Hongwei Zhou, Mingyuan Lu, Wenhao Jia
exaly

