Sounds from down-the-hole pile installation contain both impulsive and non-impulsive components. Kurtosis values (β) were determined for two datasets to investigate the impulsiveness of piling sounds. When the hammer struck the pile(s), β was 21-30 at 10 m and approximately 10 at 200 m. When the hammer was used for drilling without contacting the pile, β was 4-6 at all distances. These findings suggest that a simple dichotomy of classifying sounds as impulsive or non-impulsive may be overly simplistic for assessing marine mammal auditory impacts and studies investigating the impacts from complex sound fields are needed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/10.0012348 | DOI Listing |
JASA Express Lett
July 2022
Robert Miner Dynamic Testing of Alaska Inc., Manchester, Washington 98353, USA
Sounds from down-the-hole pile installation contain both impulsive and non-impulsive components. Kurtosis values (β) were determined for two datasets to investigate the impulsiveness of piling sounds. When the hammer struck the pile(s), β was 21-30 at 10 m and approximately 10 at 200 m.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
January 2022
Robert Miner Dynamic Testing of Alaska Inc., Manchester, Washington 98353, USA.
Sound generated by pile installation using a down-the-hole (DTH) hammer is not well documented and differs in character from sound generated by conventional impact and vibratory pile driving. This paper describes underwater acoustic characteristics from DTH pile drilling during the installation of 0.84-m shafts within 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
November 2020
Robert Miner Dynamic Testing of Alaska Inc., 2288 Colchester Drive East, Manchester, WA 98353, USA.
Although down-the-hole (DTH) pile driving is increasingly used for in-water pile installation, the characteristics of underwater noise from DTH pile driving is largely undocumented and unstudied. This study presents a comprehensive analysis of the noise characteristics during DTH pile driving of two steel pipe piles in shallow waters off southeast Alaska. The results showed that single-strike sound exposure levels measured at 10 m were 147 and 145 dB re 1 μPas with a total of 21,742 and 38,631 hammer strikes, with cumulative sound exposure levels to install each pile at 192 and 191 dB re 1 μPas, respectively.
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