Aqueducts were used by the Romans to transport water.
The ancient Romans used aqueducts to bring water to their cities.
The ancient Romans did, and believe it or not, some aqueducts are still in use today.
Yes. They were built by the Romans.
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The Romans may not have been the first to think of using an aqueduct, but they were the first people to create in and use it in their architecture.
The Romans were the first to use and create aqueducts.
When the aqueducts had to cross a valley or a gradient was needed to keep the water flowing, the Romans placed the water conduits on bridgework.
domes, aqueducts,and system of laws
That was the best material they had at that time.
The ancient Romans used aqueducts to bring water to their cities.
It wasn't. Aqueducts were made of stone, engineered to amazingly exact specifications, then polished and smoothed. Lead was actually advised against for the use in aqueducts, for its toxicity, by Vitruvius in De Architectura.
Please specify which aqueducts you are referring to.
Roads and aqueducts were abandoned in France and remained in use for years after the Romans left.
The ancient Romans did, and believe it or not, some aqueducts are still in use today.
Most of the Romans aqueducts were underground conduits. They put the conduits on bridgework when they needed to cross a valley or when they needed to keep it at a gradient to keep the water flowing.
Yes they built aqueducts for fresh water supplies
Yes. They were built by the Romans.