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Water Engineering in Ancient Societies

Water Engineering in Ancient Societies

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The chapter ‘Water Engineering in Ancient Societies’ involves the use of modern hydraulic engineering principles to describe the design, construction and use of ancient World Heritage water-system structures in South America and the Middle East.

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Keywords

  • air entrapment
  • ancient water engineering
  • aqueduct
  • Archaeology
  • Archaic period
  • beach ridges
  • Biography & True Stories
  • Bolivia
  • canals
  • Caral
  • castellum
  • central-Andes
  • CFD
  • CFD analysis
  • CFD models
  • critical flow
  • engineered landscapes
  • ENSO events
  • flow rates
  • flow stability
  • fountain
  • Humanities
  • hydraulic analysis
  • hydraulic design
  • hydraulic/hydrological analysis
  • hydraulics
  • Inca
  • Inka
  • inverted siphons
  • landscape change
  • lead pipes
  • Machu Picchu
  • moat
  • Nabataean
  • perimeter drainage channel
  • Peru
  • Petra
  • Pipelines
  • Political ecology
  • Pont du Gard
  • Pre-Columbian
  • precolumbian
  • Prehispanic
  • pressure surges
  • Reservoirs
  • resilience
  • Roman
  • Roman aqueducts
  • site termination
  • societal structure
  • static pressure
  • stone conduits
  • subterranean channels
  • surface canals
  • Tipon
  • urban Tiwanaku
  • Vitruvius
  • water engineering
  • Water security
  • Water systems
  • wetland management

Links

DOI: 10.3390/books978-3-0365-4164-8

Editions

edition cover

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