Schnitte
02-22-2001, 11:50 AM
I have always admired the technical masterpieces of huge shipping canals
like the Panama Canal, but I have one question to which I could not find a
proper answer in encyclopaedias. When they dig a canal, they usually dig the
bed first and keep it dry, and this bed is filled with water only after the
completion of excavation works. But when digging is finished, there is still
one (or two, one at every end of the canal) dike left which separates the bed
from the open sea. This dike has to be cut, but how is this done? They can
hardly dig through it, since if they did, a huge flood would come over the
workers and kill them as soon as the dike is cut through. I thought they
problably blow it off using explosives, but then how did ancient canal
builders like the Romans solve this problem?
like the Panama Canal, but I have one question to which I could not find a
proper answer in encyclopaedias. When they dig a canal, they usually dig the
bed first and keep it dry, and this bed is filled with water only after the
completion of excavation works. But when digging is finished, there is still
one (or two, one at every end of the canal) dike left which separates the bed
from the open sea. This dike has to be cut, but how is this done? They can
hardly dig through it, since if they did, a huge flood would come over the
workers and kill them as soon as the dike is cut through. I thought they
problably blow it off using explosives, but then how did ancient canal
builders like the Romans solve this problem?