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Seismic Tomography (Refraction/Reflection) Surveys in Corpus Christi

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ASCE 7 Chapter 20 and the IBC mandate site-specific shear wave velocity data for Seismic Site Class determination, and in Corpus Christi the subsurface is rarely a textbook case. The transition from Holocene barrier island sands to the Beaumont Formation’s stiff clays happens abruptly across the city, creating velocity contrasts that boreholes alone miss. We run P-wave and S-wave seismic tomography lines — both refraction and reflection — to map these transitions directly, delivering 2D velocity cross-sections that feed into foundation design, liquefaction screening, and seismic hazard analysis. Our field spreads use 24- to 48-channel seismographs with vertical and horizontal geophones, processing in SeisImager and Rayfract to invert travel-time data into layered velocity profiles. For deep excavations near the ship channel or heavy structures on Padre Island Drive, CPT testing complements the velocity model with continuous tip resistance and pore pressure data, tying geophysical boundaries to geotechnical engineering properties without interpolation.

A buried paleochannel with 40% lower shear wave velocity can shift a site from Site Class D to E — and it won't show up on a standard boring log.

Methodology and scope

A recent survey near North Beach illustrated why velocity models matter here. A proposed mid-rise hotel sat on what boring logs described as medium-dense sand over stiff clay at 35 feet. Seismic refraction tomography showed a buried paleochannel cutting across the northeast corner — a low-velocity trough that the grid of borings had completely missed. The reflection section confirmed the feature at depth, likely a filled scour from an old Nueces River meander. This scenario repeats across Corpus Christi: the Ingleside barrier system, wind-tidal flats, and fluvial incisions create complex stratigraphy that point data cannot resolve. Our standard spread uses 5-meter geophone spacing for high-resolution near-surface imaging, with hammer-and-plate or weight-drop sources for depths to 100 feet. The merged velocity models give structural engineers a continuous picture of dynamic soil properties — not just a table of assumed values.
Seismic Tomography (Refraction/Reflection) Surveys in Corpus Christi
Technical reference image — Corpus Christi

Local geotechnical context

The most common mistake we see in Corpus Christi is relying on N-value correlations alone to estimate shear wave velocity for Site Class determination. Oftentimes the local Beaumont clay is overconsolidated from desiccation, and its VS is 30-50% higher than what a generic SPT-VS correlation predicts — meaning a site gets misclassified as Class E when it's actually Class D, triggering unnecessary seismic detailing costs. The reverse also happens: loose fluvial sands beneath a stiff surface crust yield low VS that borings don't flag because SPT blow counts look acceptable in the upper 20 feet. Seismic tomography measures wave propagation directly; it doesn't infer velocity from penetration resistance. The ASTM D5777 standard specifies straight-ray and curved-ray inversion methods, and we run both, checking for hidden-layer problems that plague simple refraction interpretation. A velocity model also feeds directly into site-specific response analysis per ASCE 7 Section 21, which can justify reduction factors that code-default approaches cannot.

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Technical data

ParameterTypical value
MethodSeismic refraction and reflection tomography per ASTM D5777
Seismograph24- to 48-channel, 24-bit A/D, 0.25 ms sampling
Geophones4.5 Hz vertical (P-wave) and 14 Hz horizontal (S-wave)
Source typesSledgehammer/plate, accelerated weight drop, Betsy gun
Typical depth range15 to 100 feet (refraction); 30 to 300+ feet (reflection)
Geophone spacing5 to 10 feet depending on resolution target
Processing softwareSeisImager, Rayfract, ReflexW
Output2D P-wave and S-wave velocity cross-sections, VS30 map

Related services

01

P-Wave and S-Wave Refraction Tomography

Full 2D velocity profiling for Site Class determination, bedrock mapping, and rippability assessment. Includes first-arrival picking, tomographic inversion with topography correction, and VS30 computation per IBC guidelines.

02

Seismic Reflection Profiling

High-resolution reflection surveys for deeper stratigraphic targets — mapping the top of the Oakville Sandstone or identifying fault offsets in the Frio Formation. CMP stacking, migration, and depth conversion included.

Regulatory framework

ASTM D5777-18: Standard Guide for Using the Seismic Refraction Method, ASCE 7-22 Chapter 20: Site Classification Procedure for Seismic Design, IBC 2021 Section 1613: Earthquake Loads — Site Class Definitions, ASTM D7400-19: Standard Test Methods for Downhole Seismic Testing (cross-reference for velocity verification)

Questions and answers

How much does a seismic tomography survey cost in Corpus Christi?
How does seismic tomography differ from MASW in site classification?

MASW measures surface-wave dispersion to produce a 1D VS profile beneath the array center — it's fast and works well for layered sites. Seismic refraction tomography produces a true 2D cross-section from body waves, so it resolves lateral velocity changes — like channel fills, faults, or dipping bedrock — that a 1D MASW curve averages out. We often run both on the same spread and jointly invert the data for the most solid velocity model.

What depth can seismic refraction tomography reach in Corpus Christi soils?

Refraction depth depends on spread length and source energy. With a 240-foot spread and a weight-drop source, we typically image to 60-80 feet in the unconsolidated sands and clays common around Corpus Christi. Reflection surveys, using higher fold and CMP stacking, can reach 200 to 300 feet — enough to map the contact between Quaternary sediments and the underlying Tertiary formations. We design the acquisition geometry to meet your specific depth target.

Do I need seismic tomography if I already have SPT borings on my site?

Borings give you point data on soil type and penetration resistance. But for Site Class determination under IBC, you need shear wave velocity measured directly — not inferred from N-values. Seismic tomography provides continuous VS data between boreholes, catches lateral anomalies that borings miss, and can often justify a more favorable Site Class than default correlations would allow. It is the difference between assuming and knowing your site's seismic response.

Location and service area

We serve projects across Corpus Christi and surrounding areas.

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