Practical Engineering on MSN
How the Romans Built Concrete That Lasted 2,000 Years
Roman concrete has stood for millennia while modern structures crumble in decades but how did ancient builders create a ...
Advances in technology and other newly accessible sources have greatly expanded researchers’ ability to locate ancient roadways.
Researchers have unveiled a comprehensive map of Roman roads, expanding knowledge by nearly 59%. The dataset, Itiner-e, maps ...
Stunning map of ancient roads will give you a good reason to think about the Roman Empire more often
The Roman Empire had an impressive road network. A new dataset now visualizes the road map, adding over 100,000 kilometers of previously unknown routes.
A new comprehensive map reveals the true scale of the ancient Roman road network – but it is still incomplete.
“These Roman roads—both paved and unpaved—gave structure to massive cultural shifts that affected Western history for the ...
At the height of its dominance, the Roman Empire included over 55 million people, stretching from Britain to Egypt and Syria ...
One of the Mamluk-era tunnels carved into tufa rock at Nahal 'Amal, revealing the sophisticated hydraulic engineering that powered medieval sugar production. (Azriel Yechezkel / A. Frumkin et al., ...
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