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Encyclopedia Definition
Aqueduct
published on 01 September 2012
In antiquity, aqueducts were a means to transport water from one place to another, achieving a regular and controlled water supply to a place which would not otherwise have received sufficient water to meet basic needs such as irrigation of food crops and drinking fountains. They may take the form of underground tunnels, networks of surface channels and canals... [continue reading]
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James BromwichRoutledge (15 August 1996)Price: $42.72 -

John Peter OlesonOxford University Press, USA (30 December 2009)Price: $49.17 -

Allison LassieurChildren's Press(CT) (01 March 2005)Price: $8.95 -

Josiah OsgoodCambridge University Press (13 December 2010)Price: $31.49 -

Mary T. BoatwrightPrinceton University Press (09 December 2002)Price: $38.79 -

Raymond Van DamBaylor University Press (15 September 2010)Price: $22.23 -

Jerome Murphy-O'ConnorOxford University Press, USA (20 March 2008)Price: $29.39 -

John E. StambaughThe Johns Hopkins University Press (01 May 1988)Price: $22.56 -

Kenneth R. WrightAmerican Society of Civil Engineers (08 August 2006)Price: $48.25 -

FrontinusLoeb Classical Library (01 January 1925)Price: $22.80

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