Inside This Issue1 – Message to ISSMGE |
Editorial BoardJean-Louis Briaud Download ISSMGE Bulletin – Volume 4 Issue 2 June 2010 |
Message to ISSMGE from the President of the Geosynthetics Engineering and the International Geosynthetics Society (IGS)
Jorge ZORNBERG
President
Fumio TATSUOKA
Immediate Past President
Prof. Jorge G. ZornbergThe University of Texas at Austin Austin, Texas USAIGS President |
Prof. Fumio TatsuokaTokyo University of Science Noda City, Chiba JAPANIGS Immediate Past-President |
Dear Colleagues in the ISSMGE,
It is a privilege for us, the current President and Immediate Past-President of the International Geosynthetics Society (IGS), to jointly share with you our thoughts about the many opportunities for collaboration between the ISSMGE and the IGS.
While man-made, geosynthetics belong to the family of “geomaterials.” They are defined as planar products manufactured from polymeric materials, which are used with soil, rock or other geotechnical engineering related material as an integral part of a man-made project, structure, or system. In fact, the advent of geosynthetics has augmented significantly the range of mechanical and hydraulic properties that engineers can now adopt in the design of geotechnical systems. The variety of geomaterials is huge, as illustrated in Figure 1, obtained from a State-of-the-Art Lecture presented in the 17ICSMGE in Alexandria. Note that the geomaterials shown in the last row of this figure illustrates geosynthetic materials. As in the case of soil and rock, the properties of geosynthetics should be properly characterized. It turns out that the characterization of geosynthetic materials has significant similarities with the characterization of soil and rock.
Download ISSMGE Bulletin – Volume 4 Issue 2 June 2010
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