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11 results for "aqueduct"

J_3_01 Ancient Technology

J_3_01 — Roman Engineering — Roads, Aqueducts, and Concrete Chemistry

Roman engineering represents one of the most thoroughly documented technological achievements of the ancient world, encompassing a road network of 85,000+ km, aqueduct systems delivering over one million cubic meters of

Roman concrete opus caementicium self-healing concrete Via Appia aqueducts Pantheon
J_3_03 Ancient Technology

J_3_03 — Ancient Water Management — Qanat, Stepwell, Cistern, and Aqueduct

Ancient water management systems represent some of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring engineering achievements, many of which remain functional after millennia. Persian qanats — underground gravity-fed channels t

qanat kariz stepwell vav baoli cistern
J_2_24 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_24 — Nazca Puquio Aqueduct System: Underground Hydraulic Engineering

The puquios of the Nazca (Nasca) region in southern Peru are a system of approximately 36 known underground aqueducts that tap into subterranean aquifers and channel water through tunnels and open trenches to irrigate on

Nazca puquio aqueduct underground hydraulic engineering spiral
J_4_18 Verified Ancient Technology

J_4_18 — Ancient Hydraulic Engineering: Aqueducts, Qanat & Water Management

Ancient hydraulic engineering represents some of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring technological achievements. From the qanat systems of Persia (first millennium BCE) — underground galleries that transported gro

hydraulic engineering aqueduct qanat irrigation water management Roman aqueducts
J_3_09 Verified Ancient Technology

J_3_09 — Persian Qanats: Underground Water Engineering

The qanat (also karez, kariz, foggara, falaj) is an underground water management system developed in ancient Persia (modern Iran) that represents one of the most sustainable and ingenious hydraulic engineering achievemen

qanat kariz karez Persia Iran underground
J_3_18 Verified Ancient Technology

J_3_18 — Ancient Water Management: Qanats, Tank Cascades & Hydraulic Engineering

Water management was among the most critical and sophisticated technologies of the ancient world, with independent innovations emerging across every major civilization. The Persian qanat system — underground gravity-fed

ancient-water-management qanat-system nabataean-cisterns sri-lankan-tank-cascade roman-aqueduct hydraulic-engineering
J_3_12 Verified Ancient Technology

J_3_12 — Ancient Bridge and Road Engineering: Transport Infrastructure

Roads and bridges — the technologies that made overland travel, trade, military movement, and communication possible — represent some of the most enduring and practically significant engineering achievements of the ancie

bridge road Roman Via Appia Inca Persian
J_3_10 Verified Ancient Technology

J_3_10 — Ancient Hydraulic Engineering: Water Systems of the Classical World

The engineering of water supply, storage, and distribution systems was among the highest achievements of ancient civilizations — and in several cases represents infrastructure that was not surpassed until the 19th or 20t

hydraulic aqueduct water Roman Greek Nabataean
J_5_16 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_16 — Mesoamerican Engineering: Hydraulics, Roads, and Urban Planning

Mesoamerican civilizations — Maya, Aztec, Zapotec, and others — developed sophisticated engineering systems without draft animals, iron tools, or the functional wheel, relying on human labor, stone tools, lime-based hydr

mesoamerican-engineering maya-hydraulics tenochtitlan sacbe chinampas aztec-aqueduct
Y_5_07 Verified Altered States

Y_5_07 — Phenomenology of Pain and Pain Modulation

Pain — defined by the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP, revised 2020) as "an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissu

pain nociception pain modulation gate control theory Melzack Wall
H_1_13 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_1_13 — Knowledge Loss in the Fall of Rome and Early Middle Ages

The collapse of the Western Roman Empire (conventionally dated to 476 CE, though the decline was a process spanning the 3rd–6th centuries) produced one of the most dramatic and well-documented episodes of knowledge and t

fall of rome roman collapse dark ages early middle ages knowledge loss library destruction