It is a Study Island Question. The answer is aqueducts.
aqueducts
Temples and shrines.
an aquaduck
Aqueducts supplied ancient Roman cities with water from their sources on the mountians. It took a good deal of engineering to build these aqueducts that were many miles long. They were built all over ancient Rome's empire.
The first people to ever build actual brick/marble roads were the Ancient Romans.
The Romans did not build the tower of Pisa. The Pisans started to build it in 1173 almost 700 years after the end of ancient Roman civilisation.
The ancient Romans used aqueducts to bring water to their cities.
the greek influence was only in philosophy and art
The ancient Romans used a combination of materials such as stone, concrete, and bricks to build their aqueducts. These materials were carefully selected for their durability and ability to withstand the weight of the water being transported over long distances.
The ancient Romans used their engineering skills to build aqueducts, bridges, roads, domed structures, the hypocaust heating system and any other building projects they undertook.
Usually concrete. Romans invented concrete.
Nothing really, it was there long before the Romans ever came to Britain.