babylonians
babylonians
maya
none
salam
presence of acesory canals
babylonians
maya
Although the idea of transportation of water brings to mind the Roman aqueducts, they were relative latecomers. People in ancient Egypt and India (Harappa) had sophisticated irrigation canals well before that.
canals
People though the supposed canals were signs of a civilization living on Mars.
canals for irrigation
A river can erode and construct things, such as canals and canyons. They are strong forces.
They were quicker, as canal boats were horse-drawn. Trains could reach around 30 miles an hour. Railway tracks were also much easier to construct than canals.
I think on one of Jupiter's moons (Titan or something) they thought there might've been an alien civilization because they found canals. It might've have been on something else, but I do know they found canals and thought that at one time aliens lived there.
Aztec canals were an extensive network of waterways built by the Aztecs in ancient Mexico. These canals were used for transportation, irrigation, and as a means of drainage. They played a crucial role in the development of the Aztec civilization and were essential for the functioning of their capital city, Tenochtitlan.
they were acomplished diplomats
Irrigation canals were made in Mesopotamia as early as the 4th millennium BCE. The Sumerians, who lived in the region, utilized canals to control the flow of water from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and irrigate their fields, allowing for successful agriculture in an otherwise arid environment. These canals played a crucial role in sustaining the civilization of Mesopotamia.