PEinc - Never be sorry . . . But, with your kind permission, I feel the urge to do a
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Don't knock or sell short the 60s and 70s - the best papers ever came from those decades!! (e.g., ASCE Journal of Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering - 1967 on slope stability). See papers written by Bjerrum, Skempton, Bishop to name a few great geotechnical engineers and authors. Sure - there are lots of great new compilations out there now - but, you know, I believe, that most eminate from the old stuff. (Have you ever seen Bjerrum's paper on failure of a large oil tank due to edge failure? - a classic; simple, but, it works!). Techniques have changed - better methods of gaining data and information of the ground conditions - better theories, etc - but remember that many many jobs still don't have the budgets for such sophistications. Sometimes you need to take in on the KISS.
I don't mind dating myself, a dinosaur - I missed working the 60s having graduated mid-70s (Ed Marinaro Heisman time) but when I started working, I found the ASCE SM&FE, Geotechnique, Canadian Geotechnical Journal, Ground Engineering magazine great sources of information - and interesting reading (ever see the use the paper on using elephants for compacting soils (Canadian Geotechnical Journal - my Moynihan (I believe) - a spoof!!). I admit I do like to see the newer references as well - at least what I can get overseas - but I find that the older papers and books (by the founders of our profession) read better. Also, they take more time to mould you in learning how to think as a geotechnical engineer than do newer sources (compare Tschebatarioff, Tomlinson, Chellis, Krynine and Judd to your FHWA manuals - you will see and learn things that the FHWA manuals will NEVER mention - and the graphics are better too). Use them for the basics - then gravitate . . . Take it all in from the dinosaurs to the techies! Best to all.
p.s. Thanks for the list!!