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Connecticut Water Trails Association |
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Connecticut Water Trails Program Dams
The History Of Dams
The word dam can be traced back to Middle English,
and before that, from Middle Dutch, as seen in the names of many old
cities.
The earliest known dam is situated in Jawa, Jordan, 100 km northeast of the capital Amman. The gravity dam featured a 9 m high and 1 m wide stone wall, supported by a 50 m wide earth rampart. The structure is dated to 3000 BC.
The Ancient Egyptian Sadd Al-Kafara at Wadi Al-Garawi, located about 25 kilometers south of Cairo, was 102 m long at its base and 87 m wide. The structure was built around 2800 or 2600 B.C. as a diversion dam for flood control, but was destroyed by heavy rain during construction or shortly afterwards.
The Romans were also great dam builders, with many examples such as the three dams at Subiaco on the river Anio in Italy. Many large dams also survive at Merida in Spain.
The
oldest surviving and standing dam in the world is believed to be the
Quatinah barrage in modern-day Syria. The dam is assumed to date back to
the reign of the Egyptian pharao Sethi (1319-1304 BC), and was enlarged
in the Roman period and between 1934-38. It still supplies the city of
Homs with water
Du Jiang Yan is the oldest surviving irrigation system in China that included a dam that directed waterflow. It was finished in 251 B.C. A large earthen dam, made by the Prime Minister of Chu (state), Sunshu Ao, flooded a valley in modern-day northern Anhui province that created an enormous irrigation reservoir (62 miles in circumference), a reservoir that is still present today.
In the Iran, bridge dams were used to power a water wheel working a water-raising mechanism. The first was built in Dezful, which could raise 50 cubits of water for the water supply to all houses in the town. Also diversion dams were known. Milling dams were introduced which the Muslim engineers called the Pul-i-Bulaiti. The first was built at Shustar on the River Karun, Iran, and many of these were later built in other parts of the Islamic world. Water was conducted from the back of the dam through a large pipe to drive a water wheel and watermill.
In the
Netherlands, a low-lying country, dams were often applied to block
rivers in order to regulate the water level and to prevent the sea from
entering the marsh lands. Such dams often marked the beginning of a town
or city because it was easy to cross the river at such a place, and
often gave rise to the respective place's names in Dutch. For instance
the Dutch capital Amsterdam (old name Amstelredam) started with a dam
through the river Amstel in the late 12th Century , and Rotterdam
started with a dam through the river Rotte, a minor tributary of the
Nieuwe Maas. The central square of Amsterdam, believed to be the
original place of the 800 year old dam, still carries the name Dam
Square or simply the Dam.
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