sqsibob -
The rock dumped was very hard and durable rock (taconite, gabbro(?) and some 2" seams of hard granite in the inplace materials). The mine pit it cut across was on older (5 to 20 year old) iron ore mine with and hard taconite rock at the lower 50'. - All the materials were very tough and durable to a fault.
The material being dumped was from a rock excavation up to 70' high for a railroad line. There was about 1' of topsoil (down to nothing in places). The upper portions of the native rock had some fissures that made blasting tough because of the energy absorbed and the shot rock was about 6" to 12" in size. The lower portion was very solid and easy to blast, and there were a lot of 6' to 8' shot rock that had to be mudcapped or drilled and then blasted down to 3' to be loaded and moved.
From my eye, the maximum settlement was about 15% of the maximun fill depth and the settlement came within 6 months or so of the placement and was due to the physical loads, shifting and consolidation of the fill material and not from decomposition or working into the 5' of crystal clear water, typical of the abandoned open pit mines with very little sediment i the bottom.
The whole fill was designed, but because the owner had an excess of equipment available and needed a way to keep the busy and get rid of the rough rock excavation that they were responsible for. When the fill was brought up to plan grade, the top of the fill for the access road was widened by about 40' since the equipment and sound fill material was readily available. - Not the "by-the-book" way to do things, but M-K and the other contractors could not respond quick enough since the access road served all truck deliveries plus the car traffic for the 2500 workers on site 24/7.
This information may not be applicable to your purpose, but it is an example of one situation.
The whole several years on the job was an eye-opener when I was also an owners representative on the contruction of a 2 mile long tailings dam through a swamp, connecting silty sand hills that required about 3,000,000 yards of clay and sand. Seeing clay and sand being excavated and hauled 2 miles at 0F to -40F on a 24/7 basis was also a "not-by- the book" operation, but the dam through up to 35' of muskeg swamp could not be started until the middle of January when the swamp surface could be made stable enough for dragline access.
Dick
Engineer and international traveler interested in construction techniques, problems and proper design.