Hervey Bay
Hervey Bay, Australia

Residual Soil Characterization in Hervey Bay

Hervey Bay presents a sharp contrast in ground conditions: the coastal sands around Urangan sit atop shallow water tables, while the volcanic-derived residual soils near Point Vernon and the suburb of Scarness grade from silty clay into completely weathered rhyolite within a few metres. These profiles, formed by in-situ weathering of the underlying Maryborough Basin rocks, require careful residual soil characterization to distinguish true bearing capacity from apparent strength. Before we specify foundation depths or pavement subgrade design, we run a full profile of index tests and strength parameters. It is common to combine this work with a study of settlement behaviour in the softer clay layers that often cap the residual horizon, and with plate load testing to confirm modulus values directly on the weathered rock surface.

Illustrative image of Residual soil characterization in Hervey Bay
Residual soils formed from Maryborough Basin rhyolite lose up to 40% of their undrained strength within 48 hours of exposure to wet-season humidity.

Service characteristics in Hervey Bay

The Maryborough Basin geology yields residual soils that retain relict jointing from the parent rock, making them prone to sudden strength loss once excavation exposes them to moisture. Hervey Bay receives roughly 1,050 mm of rain annually, concentrated between December and March, which can rapidly degrade the upper metre of these profiles. Our characterization protocol for Hervey Bay sites includes moisture content trending, Atterberg limits on the fine fraction, and multi-stage triaxial testing on undisturbed samples. We also run in-situ pocket penetrometer checks at 0.5 m intervals across the site. A typical parameter set from a recent commercial lot near the Hervey Bay Hospital showed an undrained shear strength of 95-140 kPa in the upper clayey silt, dropping to 60 kPa after 48 hours of exposure. For projects where water ingress is a concern, we cross-reference results with a permeability lab test to quantify infiltration rates through the weathered fabric.
Residual Soil Characterization in Hervey Bay
ParameterTypical value
Profile depth range1.5 m to 6.0 m (weathered rhyolite base)
Moisture content range18% to 38% (upper 2 m)
Undrained shear strength (intact)95-140 kPa (clayey silt/silty clay)
Undrained shear strength (after 48 hr exposure)60-80 kPa
N-value from DCP (upper 1.5 m)8-14 blows/300 mm
Plasticity Index range12-25 (low to medium plasticity)

Critical ground factors in Hervey Bay

AS 4678:2002 for earth-retaining structures and AS 1726:2017 for geotechnical site investigations both apply directly to residual soil characterization in Hervey Bay. The key risk is that relict jointing, inherited from the original rhyolite or tuff, creates preferential failure planes that a standard borehole log may miss. If the investigation only samples the matrix material, the design may overestimate the mass strength by a factor of two or more. We therefore require oriented core or test pit mapping on any site where the residual profile exceeds 3 m in thickness, especially near the coastal escarpment at Point Vernon where slope instability has been documented.

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Applicable standards: AS 1726:2017 Geotechnical Site Investigations, AS 4678:2002 Earth-Retaining Structures, AS 1726 Description and Identification of Soils (Visual-Manual Procedure)

Our services

We offer two focused services for residual soil characterization in Hervey Bay, scaled to the specific weathering grades found in the Maryborough Basin formations.

Full Profile Weathering-Grade Logging

Field logging of each horizon from topsoil through completely weathered rock, with hand penetrometer readings, moisture sampling, and photographic record at every 0.5 m interval. Includes classification per AS 1726 and USC system, plus a preliminary strength profile delivered within 48 hours of fieldwork.

Laboratory Strength & Index Suite

Multi-stage triaxial (UU and CU), Atterberg limits, particle size distribution, and natural moisture content on undisturbed tube samples. All tests performed by a NATA-accredited laboratory. Results include a written interpretation of the residual soil's sensitivity to moisture and disturbance, referenced to the site's specific weathering profile.

Frequently asked questions

Why do residual soils in Hervey Bay need a different characterization approach than transported soils?

Residual soils retain the fabric and jointing of the parent rock, so their strength is anisotropic and moisture-sensitive. Transported soils have a more uniform, remoulded structure. In Hervey Bay, the weathered rhyolite profiles lose strength rapidly when exposed, so our testing sequence prioritises undisturbed sampling and rapid turnaround to capture the in-situ condition before moisture equilibration alters the values.

What is the typical cost range for residual soil characterization on a standard residential lot in Hervey Bay?

For a standard residential lot with two test pits to 3 m depth and a basic laboratory suite, the cost ranges between AU$1,340 and AU$2,850. A larger commercial site requiring four boreholes with multi-stage triaxial testing and full index suite sits between AU$2,850 and AU$4,460. These figures exclude mobilisation for sites beyond the Hervey Bay urban area.

How deep do residual profiles typically extend in the Point Vernon and Urangan areas?

At Point Vernon, the weathered rhyolite profile typically extends 3 to 5 m before reaching moderately weathered rock suitable for shallow footing bearing. In Urangan, the residual layer is thinner, often 1.5 to 2.5 m, because the coastal sands and alluvial deposits overlie the weathered zone. We always confirm the base of the residual horizon with a hand auger or DCP refusal before finalising the foundation recommendation.

Can residual soil characterization be done on a sloping site near the Hervey Bay esplanade?

Yes, but the investigation must include oriented sampling to identify relict joint dip directions. A standard vertical borehole may miss a critical failure plane. For sloping sites, we recommend at least one test pit oriented perpendicular to the slope, with joint orientation recorded. AS 4678 requires this level of detail for any retaining structure or cut slope steeper than 1.5H:1V.

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