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Chapter 1. Historical Perspective of Water Use and Development. Chapter Headings. Drinking Water for Early Civilizations Early Irrigation and Flood-Control Projects Early Water Transportation Development Early Hydropower Development. What is Civilization?.
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Chapter 1 Historical Perspective of Water Use and Development
Chapter Headings • Drinking Water for Early Civilizations • Early Irrigation and Flood-Control Projects • Early Water Transportation Development • Early Hydropower Development
What is Civilization? • For civilization to emerge you need • Agriculture • Cities • “Leisure time” to develop skilled workers • Among the key features are • Ability to manage water • Suitable soil and climate for agriculture
Managing Water Resources • Even in the earliest civilizations we can find evidence of water management • Delivery of drinking water to cities using qanats and aqueducts • Routing of wastewater out of cities • Delivery of water for agriculture through irrigation • Transportation • Hydropower
Drinking Water for Early Civilizations • Earliest civilization centers emerged in: • Mesopotamia along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers (Iraq) • Indus River (Pakistan) • Yangtze River (China) • Nile River (Egypt) • Greek and Roman empires (Mediterranean)
Qanats • Qanat system developed in Mesopotamia area • From a Semitic word meaning “to dig” • Semitic: subfamily of Afro-Asiatic language family that includes Hebrew and Arabic • Delivered ground water by gravity from an upland area where it was plentiful to lowland agricultural areas and cities
Qanat shafts served 3 purposes • Air supply • Remove soil and rock • Keep tunnels from being too long • http://www.livius.org/q/qanat/qanat.html View down a shaft to water below Outlet Aerial photo showing collapsed shafts
Aqueducts • Roman empire developed an extensive system of aqueducts to deliver surface water by gravity to cities • Water was delivered to fountains and baths where citizens collected and used it • Allowed cities to grow in size • Reduced amount of time that individuals (usually women) spent obtaining daily water
Women at a stream collecting water to carry to their village in Cameroon UNESCO www.wateryear2003.org
Coaca Maxima (main sewer) for ancient Rome Example of routing wastewater away from cities http://courses.washington.edu/tande/urb/
Wind Gap Pumping Plant, Tehachapi Range north of LA California Aqueduct
Drinking Water Today • Supplying drinking water is still an important function today • Many problems • Water quality (bacteria, carcinogens, heavy metals, etc.) • Water quantity (competition with agricultural for water) • We’ll discuss these in later chapters
Chapter Headings • Drinking Water for Early Civilizations • Early Irrigation and Flood-Control Projects • Early Water Transportation Development • Early Hydropower Development
Early Irrigation and Flood Control • Civilization centers developed where soils were fertile • For soils to be fertile nutrients must be collected and deposited in an area so that they become concentrated • Flooding deposits rich mountain (volcanic) soils in river floodplains • Glaciers deposit rich topsoils at their terminus and in wind blown loess
Early Irrigation and Flood Control • Floodplains are often in dry areas that require irrigation • Nile River civilization is a good example • Sediments from the mountains of Ethiopia and Sudan are deposited in the floodplains of Egypt • Ancient Egyptians developed an elaborate irrigation system for Nile floodplain
Simple devices for lifting water from the river into irrigation canals: shadoufs, tambour or Achimedes screw, and saqia water wheel
Early Irrigation in the U.S. • Anasazi Indians developed irrigation systems in Southwest desert region around 950 AD
Chaco Canyon irrigation R.G. Vivian, Chaco Canyon Handbook
Early Irrigation in the U.S. • Brigham Young and Mormon followers began extensive irrigation system in Salt Lake Valley of Utah in 1847 • Region receives 15 in of annual rainfall • Constructed diversion dams across rivers and diverted water into irrigation ditches • Small diversion dams were made of logs, rocks and brush • Irrigation ditches were made using horse-drawn plows and hand digging
Early Irrigation in the U.S. • Construction of an irrigation ditch was not simple • A ditch too steep would cause fast flow that would erode the ditch and wash it out • A ditch that was too flat would not move water • Rule of thumb was a fall of about 2 feet per mile
Early Irrigation in the U.S. • Homestead Act passed in 1862 • Opened the floodgates of development in the West • Anyone over the age of 21 could acquire ownership of 160 acres if • Lived on it for 5 years • Made improvements to the property • Cost was $1.25 per acre • Water for irrigation became a critical issue
Early Irrigation in the U.S. • In 1870’s Horace Greeley, editor of NY Tribune promoted settlement in the West with the phrase “Go West, Young Man” • Time was ripe for western migration • Civil War ended in 1865 • Transcontinental railroad completed in 1869 • Organized a settlement in Colorado (today called Greeley) to replicate the irrigation successes of Mormons in Utah
Early Irrigation in the U.S. • Late 1800’s was a period of unusually wet weather in West • As normal rainfall returned many settlers without irrigation water were forced to abandon their land and move into town to work in other professions • Drought period in 1930’s forced more settlers to abandon land and become migrant workers • Described in “Grapes of Wrath” by John Steinbeck
Irrigation Today • Irrigation today is extensive in western U.S. and other areas of the world • A number of associated problems • Competition for water with urban sources • Salinization of soils • Sedimentation of reservoirs • Effect on stream flow and water quality • Will discuss these in later chapters
Chapter Headings • Drinking Water for Early Civilizations • Early Irrigation and Flood-Control Projects • Early Water Transportation Development • Early Hydropower Development
Early Transportation Development • One of the reasons civilization centers developed near rivers is these were the “interstates” • River and canal systems used for boat traffic • Nile and Yangtze River are examples • Later extensive canal system developed in Europe
Early Transportation Development • Erie Canal constructed 1817-1825 • Connected Buffalo on Lake Erie to Albany on Hudson River • 363 miles • Cut travel time from 20 days to 6 days • Cut transportation costs from $100 to $5/ton • Ohio & Erie Canal connected Ohio River to Lake Erie
Check Google map to see full extent of St. Lawrence River http://www.google.com/maphp?hl=en&tab=wl&q=
Canal boat pulled by mule on towpath on the C &O canal In Washington DC; canal ran 184 miles from Cumberland MD to DC
Early Transportation Development • Mississippi River has been through history and continues to be a major transportation system for U.S. • Before steamboats keelboats and flatboats were used to move produce down river • After steamboats developed (1810) traffic ran up and downstream • Army Corps of Engineers responsible for clearing snags