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This is one of a number of obstacle-crossing devices employed by military engineering. Probably the largest military pontoon bridge ever constructed was used by Xerxes to cross the Hellespont in 480 bc on the way to his ill-fated invasion of Greece. The Greek historian Herodotus decribed 676 ships anchored and moored together in parallel lines, with a wooden roadway laid over them. Alexander ‘the Great’ is said to have crossed the Oxus on a bridge laid over floats, but his usual technique was to use rafts. The Romans were great bridge builders and twice used the technique to cross the Rhine. In more modern times, Gonzálo Fernández de Córdoba used pontoons to outflank the French on the Garigliano river in 1503, and the fact that it was his skill in installing them quickly and secretly that was commented upon suggests that the technique itself was well known.
The first use of what we now call a pontoon bridge, namely the assembly of prefabricated parts specifically accompanying the army for the purpose, was by Gustavus Adolphus in 1632 when he had a 109 yard (100 metre) bridge constructed across a river near the village of Rain in Bavaria, allowing his army to cross supported by artillery fire and a screen of smoke. The technique was widely copied and the French gave it its name c.1676. It consisted of stretching a cable across the obstacle and attaching flat bottomed boat-like pontoons to it one after another and poling them across, then laying a roadway across them with timber beams. Military engineers would choose the site, but specialists known in the British army as ‘tin boatmen’ because of the metal sheathing of the pontoons would construct it. The floats themselves accompanied the army on a train of wagons and were 17-20 feet (5.2-6.1 metres) long.
At the end of Napoleon's disastrous Russian campaign of 1812, a careless order resulted in the destruction of the retreating army's pontoons, requiring his engineers to build bridges across the Berezina from demolished houses. It required a prodigious display of courage and skill, plus more good luck than anyone had a right to pray for, to save the remains of the Grand Armée from annihilation. Fifty years later a failure to measure the channels they would have to float down resulted in a three-week delay in the arrival of pontoons for Burnside's plan for a surprise crossing of the Rappahannock; he went ahead anyway and his engineers somehow bridged the river in the face of a well-prepared defence. It would have been better for the Union army if they had failed, as the ensuing battle of Fredericksburg was their most lop-sided defeat of the war.
One of the most successful versions of the pontoon bridge was the ‘Birago’ bridge (1841), named after its inventor. It consisted of two pontoons that could be carried on trucks with all other equipment necessary for its construction. It was introduced into all German-speaking armies, and was the basic design for all subsequent military bridging until WW II. Although WW II saw the introduction of the Bailey bridge and mechanized bridgelayers for shorter spans, an invading army once more crossed the Rhine on pontoon bridges in 1945. Like all good designs, it is simple and flexible and refuses to grow old.
— Jon Robb-Webb/Hugh Bicheno
| WordNet: bateau bridge |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a temporary bridge built over a series of pontoons
Synonyms: pontoon bridge, floating bridge
| Wikipedia: Pontoon bridge |
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| Pontoon bridge | |
|---|---|
The U.S. 9th Army crosses the Rhine on a temporary steel treadway pontoon bridge, 1945. |
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| Carries: | Pedestrian, automobile, truck |
| Span range: | Short to long |
| Material: | Various: steel, concrete, boats, barrels, plastic floats, appropriate decking material |
| Movable: | Generally no, but may have movable sections for watercraft passage |
| Design effort: | low |
| Falsework required: | No |
A pontoon bridge or floating bridge is a bridge that floats on water, supported by barge-or-boat-like pontoons to support the bridge deck and its dynamic loads. While pontoon bridges are usually temporary structures, some are used for long periods of time. Permanent floating bridges are useful for sheltered water-crossings where it is not considered economically feasible to suspend a bridge from anchored piers. Such bridges can require a section that is elevated, or can be raised or removed, to allow ships to pass.
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Pontoon bridges are especially useful in wartime as river crossings. Such bridges are usually temporary, and are sometimes destroyed after crossing (to keep the enemy from using them), or collapsed and carried (if on a long march). They were used to great advantage in many battles throughout time, including the Battle of Garigliano, the Battle of Oudenarde, and many others.
Pontoon bridges have been in use since ancient times.
The ancient China, the Zhou Dynasty Chinese text of the Shi Qing (Book of Odes) records that King Wen of Zhou was the first to create a pontoon bridge in the 11th century BC. However, the historian Joseph Needham has pointed out that in all likely scenarios, the temporary pontoon bridge was invented during the 9th century BC - 8th century BC in China, as this part was perhaps a later addition to the book (considering how the book had been edited up until the Han Dynasty, 202 BC - 220 AD). Although earlier temporary pontoon bridges had been made in China, the first secure and permanent ones (and linked with iron chains) in China came first during the Qin Dynasty (221 BC - 207 BC). The later Song Dynasty (960 - 1279 AD) Chinese statesman Cao Cheng once wrote of early pontoon bridges in China (spelling of Chinese in Wade-Giles format):
The Chhun Chhiu Hou Chuan says that in the 58th year of the Zhou King Nan (257 BC), there was invented in the Qin State the floating bridge (fou chhiao) with which to cross rivers. But the Ta Ming ode in the Shih Ching (Book of Odes) says (of King Wen) that he ‘joined boats and made of them a bridge’ over the River Wei. Sun Yen comments that this shows that the boats were arranged in a row, like the beams (of a house) with boards laid (transversely) across them, which is just the same as the pontoon bridge of today. Tu Yu also thought this...Cheng Khang Chheng says that the Zhou people invented it and used it whenever they had occasion to do so, but the Qin people, to whom they handed it down, were the first to fasten it securely together (for permanent use).[1]
During the Eastern Han Dynasty (25 - 220 AD), the Chinese created a very large pontoon bridge that spanned across the width of the Yellow River. There was also the rebellion of Gongsun Shu in 33 AD, where a large pontoon bridge with fortified posts was constructed across the Yangtze River, eventually broken through with ramming ships by official Han troops under Commander Cen Peng. During the late Eastern Han into the Three Kingdoms period, during the Battle of Chibi in 208 AD, the Prime Minister Cao Cao once linked the majority of his fleet together with iron chains, which proved to be a fatal mistake once he was thwarted with a fire attack by Sun Quan's fleet.
The armies of Emperor Taizu of Song had a large pontoon bridge built across the Yangtze River in 974 in order to secure supply lines during the Song Dynasty's conquest of the Southern Tang.[2]
On October 22, 1420, Ghiyasu'd-Din Naqqah, an envoy of the embassy sent by the Timurid ruler of Persia, Mirza Shahrukh (r. 1404–1447), to the Ming Dynasty of China during the reign of the Yongle Emperor (r. 1402–1424), recorded his sight and travel over a large floating pontoon bridge at Lanzhou (constructed earlier in 1372) as he crossed the Yellow River on this day. He wrote that it was:
...composed of twenty three boats, of great excellence and strength attached together by a long chain of iron as thick as a man's thigh, and this was moored on each side to an iron post as thick as a man's waist extending a distance of ten cubits on the land and planted firmly in the ground, the boats being fastened to this chain by means of big hooks. There were placed big wooden planks over the boats so firmly and evenly that all the animals were made to pass over it without difficulty.[3]
The Greek writer Herodotus in his Histories, records several pontoon bridges. For Emperor Darius I The Great of Persia (522 BC - 485 BC), the Greek Mandrocles of Samos once engineered a pontoon bridge that stretched across the Bosporus, linking Asia to Europe, so that Darius could pursue the fleeing Scythians as well as move his army into position in the Balkans to overwhelm Macedon. Another spectacular pontoon bridge was a pair of floating bridges across the Hellespont by Xerxes I in 480 BC to transport his huge army into Europe:
The late Roman writer Vegetius, in his work De Re Militari, wrote:
The emperor Caligula is said to have ridden a horse across a pontoon bridge stretching two miles between Baiae and Puteoli while wearing the armour of Alexander the Great to mock a soothsayer who had claimed he had "no more chance of becoming emperor than of riding a horse across the Bay of Baiae." Caligula's construction of the bridge cost a massive sum of money and added to discontent with his rule.
Although pontoons declined in use during the European Middle Ages, they were still used alongside regular boats to span rivers during campaigns, or to link communities which lacked resources to build permanent bridges. [4]
In the 1670s, the French devised the copper pontoon; after this point, rivers and canals ceased to present significant obstacles.[5] The early modern period in pontoon use was dominated by the wars of the 18th and 19th centuries during which the art and science of pontoon bridging barely changed.
Pontoons were extensively used by both the armies and civilians throughout the first half of the 20th century and both World Wars, particularly on the Eastern Front by the Red Army which developed fast assault pontoon bridging techniques to facilitate their offensive operations.
The longest military pontoon bridge ever constructed across a river was built in 1995 by the 502nd Engineer Company, as part of IFOR. It was assembled under adverse weather conditions across the Sava near Županja (between Croatia and Bosnia), and had a total length of 2,034 feet (620 m). It was disassembled in 1996.
Modern variants of the pontoon bridge are still essential and in use (as of 2007) by modern armies. As an example, the American Army has developed a version dubbed the "Assault Float Ribbon Bridge". It was constructed during combat by the 299th Multi-role Bridge Company, USAR [4] on the Euphrates River at Objective Peach near Al Musayib on the night of 3 April 2003. This took place during the 2003 invasion of Iraq by American and British forces. The 185-meter Assault Float Bridge was built to support retrograde operations due to the heavy armor traffic crossing a partially destroyed highway span. That same night, the 299th also constructed a 40-meter single-story Medium Girder Bridge to patch the damage done to the highway span. The 299th was part of the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division as they crossed the border into Iraq on 20 March 2003. Examples of the construction and use of pontoon bridges during combat operations date back through World War II and earlier [5] [6][7].
When designing a pontoon bridge, the engineer must take into consideration the maximum amount of load that it is intended to support. Each pontoon can support a load equal to the mass of the water that it displaces, but this load also includes the mass of the bridge itself. If the maximum load of a bridge section is exceeded, one or more pontoons become submerged and will proceed to sink. The roadway across the pontoons must also be able to support the load, yet be light enough not to limit their carrying capacity.
Prior to the advent of modern military pontoon bridge-building equipment, floating bridges were typically constructed using wood. Such a wooden floating bridge could be built in a series of sections, starting from an anchored point on the shore. Pontoons were formed using boats; several barrels lashed together; rafts of timbers, or some combination of these. Each bridge section consisted of one or more pontoons, which were maneuvered into position and then anchored. These pontoons were then linked together using wooden stringers called balks. The balks were then covered by a series of cross planks called chesses to form a road surface, and the chesses were held in place with side rails. The bridge was repeatedly extended in this manner until the opposite bank was reached.
Precautions are needed to protect a pontoon bridge from becoming damaged. The bridge can be dislodged or inundated whenever the load limit of the bridge is exceeded. A pontoon bridge can also become overloaded when one section of the bridge is weighted down much more heavily than the other parts. The bridge can be induced to sway or oscillate in a hazardous manner due to the regular stride of a group of soldiers, or from other types of repeated loads. Drift and heavy floating objects can also accumulate on the pontoons, increasing the drag from river current and potentially damaging the bridge.
Submerged floating-tube bridges have been considered for use across ocean straits and even across entire oceans[citation needed]. It is estimated that a submerged floating tunnel would be two to three times more costly to build than a floating bridge, and the technology remains unproven. No submerged floating tunnel exists in the world at present.
Floating bridges can be vulnerable to inclement weather, especially strong winds.
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