We see it too often. A crew in Sioux Falls breaks ground based on a single boring log and hits a pocket of fat clay that nobody anticipated. The project stalls. The budget stretches. A simple exploratory test pit would have shown the seam of soft material before the excavator ever arrived. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built on this principle decades ago when mapping the Big Sioux River basin. There is no substitute for putting a technician in the trench and looking at the stratigraphy with their own eyes. It picks up what a split spoon misses. We combine that direct observation with lab index tests—Atterberg limits refine the plasticity profile right there in the field, and a companion grain size analysis confirms whether that silty lens is truly drainable or just looks clean.
In Sioux Falls' layered alluvium, a single exploratory test pit often reveals more about foundation risk than three deep borings spaced fifty feet apart.
How we work
Local ground factors
One thing we notice repeatedly in Sioux Falls is how the spring thaw plays tricks on fine-grained soils. A test pit dug in October looks stable. The same profile in March, after freeze-thaw cycles and snowmelt seepage, shows sloughing walls and standing water at the till contact. That seasonal groundwater fluctuation is a design parameter, not a curiosity. If the pit is logged only in dry summer months, the winter water level gets missed, and the foundation drainage plan becomes guesswork. Collapse is rare when pits are properly benched and stepped according to OSHA Subpart P, but a vertical cut in saturated silt near the river can ravel fast. We always recommend a short stand-up time assessment when the pit exposes the phreatic surface.
Relevant standards
ASTM D2487 (USCS Classification), IBC 2021 Chapter 18 (Soils and Foundations), OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart P (Excavation Safety)
Other technical services
Standard Exploratory Pit Package
A single pit up to 10 feet deep, machine-excavated with a mini-excavator. Includes full stratigraphic log, bulk sampling of each distinct layer, in-situ pocket penetrometer readings, and photo record. Suitable for preliminary foundation recommendations and septic system design in Minnehaha County.
Detailed Sampling and Lab Correlation
Adds undisturbed Shelby tube sampling at the bearing elevation, hand-carved block samples for strength testing, and lab classification of all fines by Atterberg limits and hydrometer. We deliver a comprehensive report with design parameters for shallow foundations or retaining walls.
Typical parameters
Common questions
What does an exploratory test pit cost in the Sioux Falls area?
Most projects fall between US$520 and US$830 for a standard single pit with logging and bulk sampling. Variables include access constraints, depth beyond 10 feet, and the number of undisturbed samples required for lab testing.
How deep can you excavate a test pit safely along the Big Sioux River?
Depth depends entirely on the soil type and groundwater. In the sandy alluvium near the river, we typically bench the excavation at 4-foot intervals, reaching 8 to 12 feet with a stepped profile. Saturated, cohesionless soils may require tighter benching.
Can you take undisturbed samples from an exploratory test pit?
Yes. We carve block samples directly from the pit wall or push thin-walled Shelby tubes into the floor at the bearing elevation. The key is speed—samples are sealed and transported to the lab within hours to preserve natural moisture content and structure.
