Search results for "Roman aqueduct"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Carbonates from the ancient world's longest aqueduct:A testament of Byzantine water management

2021

The fourth‐ and fifth‐century aqueduct system of Constantinople is, at 426 km, the longest water supply line of the ancient world. Carbonate deposits in the aqueduct system provide an archive of both archaeological developments and palaeo‐environmental conditions during the depositional period. The 246‐km‐long aqueduct line from the fourth century used springs from a small aquifer, whereas a 180‐km‐long fifth‐century extension to the west tapped a larger aquifer. Although historical records testify at least 700 years of aqueduct activity, carbonate deposits in the aqueduct system display less than 27 years of operation. This implies that the entire system must have been cleaned of carbonate…

Archeology552.5business.industrywater supplyRoman aqueductWater supplyAqueductAncient history930 History of ancient world550 Geowissenschaftenchemistry.chemical_compoundcarbonate930 Alte Geschichtechemistry550 Earth sciencesEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)CarbonateByzantineConstantinoplebusinessGeologyByzantine architecture
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Laminated carbonate deposits in Roman aqueducts: Origin, processes and implications

2013

Carbonate deposits in Roman aqueducts of Patara and Aspendos (southern Turkey) were studied to analyse the nature of their regular layering. Optical microscopy and electron-backscattered diffraction results show an alternation of dense, coarsely crystalline, translucent laminae composed of bundles and fans of elongate calcite crystals with their c-axes parallel to the long axis, and porous, fine-grained laminae with crystals at near-random orientation. The ?18O and ?13C data show a strong cyclicity and anti-correlation, whereby high and low ?18O values correspond to dense columnar and porous fine-grained laminae, respectively. Geochemical analyses show similar cyclic changes in carbonate co…

Hydraulic structurescrystal structureTurkeyaqueductcarbon isotopeδ18OStratigraphyRoman aqueductMineralogyisotopic compositionsediment chemistryAqueductMuglaOptical microscopyBioactivityIsotopes of oxygenClimate modelschemistry.chemical_compoundCalcareous sinterIsotopesSinteringstable isotopeMagnesiumoxygen isotopeLaminatingCarbonate depositsAnalytical geochemistryPataraCalcareous sinterLayeringStable isotopesCalciteClimatologyTrace elementsMass spectrometryCalciteWatertrace elementGeologyLamination (geology)Electromagnetic inductionchemistryTufaCarbonateCarbonationcarbonate sedimentDepositsGeologyCrystal orientation
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Environmental and depositional controls on laminated freshwater carbonates: An example from the Roman aqueduct of Patara, Turkey

2013

Carbonate deposits in aqueducts are a new high-resolution data source for environmental changes during the time of the Roman Empire, notably in the fields of palaeoclimate and spring hydrology. In order to distinguish environmental effects from those related to depositional setting, laminated carbonate deposits were compared along the entire length of an ancient aqueduct channel at Patara, Turkey. The carbonate deposits, up to 80mm in thickness, are composed of lamina couplets up to 1mm thick of alternating porous microspar and dense, columnar sparite. The former formed in the dry, warm season and the latter in the wet, cool season. The presence of biofilms seems to play a role in the devel…

Turkeyaqueductcarbon isotopeRoman eraδ18ORoman aqueductmicrostructureGeochemistryAqueductMuglaArchaeoseismologyPalaeoclimateOceanographybiofilmIsotopes of oxygenSedimentary depositional environmentcarbonatechemistry.chemical_compoundPaleontologyCalcareous sinterwater temperaturepaleoclimatelaminationstable isotopeoxygen isotopeCarbonate depositssinterPataraEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsStable isotopesdepositional environmentEarth-Surface ProcessesCalcareous sinterPaleontologyarchaeologyLamination (geology)chemistryCarbonateLayeringenvironmental effectGeologyPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Characterization of mortars from ancient and traditional water supply systems in Sicily

2008

Long aged mortars from ancient hydraulic constructions of Sicily, i.e. the Roman aqueduct of Thermae and the Punic cisterns and traditional water supply systems in Pantelleria, have been characterised by means of XRD analysis, optical microscopy and simultaneous thermal analysis to correlate the hydraulic properties to the texture and to their different role in the construction, i.e. lining, covering, roofing and joint mortars. According to a procedure proposed in the literature all of the samples, but two air hardening ones, show high hydraulicity, which somehow can be related to the characteristics of aggregates.

Pore sizebusiness.industryRoman aqueductDTA-TGhydraulicityMineralogyWater supplyAqueductCondensed Matter Physicshistoric mortarCharacterization (materials science)punic cisternPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMortarbusinesstextureJoint (geology)GeologyJournal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry
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