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Judi Lynn

(160,630 posts)
Thu Apr 9, 2015, 08:31 PM Apr 2015

Resurrecting 1500-Year-Old Canals Could Fix Peru's Water Shortages

Resurrecting 1500-Year-Old Canals Could Fix Peru's Water Shortages
Sarah Zhang
4/09/15 6:00pm



Lima is one of the world’s largest desert cities, so when it rains it—just kidding, it pretty much never rains. Which leaves Peru’s capital city especially vulnerable to water shortages, and the surprising solution might be reviving a system of ancient canals that date back to even before the Incas.

As New Scientist reports, the city’s water utility company is now working to conserve ancient stone canals in the Andes mountains called amunas. These canals, long fallen into disuse, were originally built by the Wari culture 1,000 to 1,500 years ago. The water company will be grouting these long-forgotten canals to make them functional again.

The amunas are actually much than primitive aqueducts bringing water into the city; they’re a feat of major landscape engineering. They divert water during the rainy season, when big rivers overfloweth, to springs that then run year-round, essentially turning the landscape into a giant sponge that can be squeezed for water during the dry season.

Water specialists estimate that reviving the amunas can account for 60 percent of the water deficit during Lima’s dry season. And it’s a lot cheaper than a fancy new desalination plant. Sometimes ancient tech can be just as good as high tech.

http://gizmodo.com/resurrecting-1500-year-old-canals-could-fix-perus-water-1696772190

(Short article, no more at link.)

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Resurrecting 1500-Year-Old Canals Could Fix Peru's Water Shortages (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2015 OP
"Sometimes ancient tech can be just as good as high tech" Nihil Apr 2015 #1
 

Nihil

(13,508 posts)
1. "Sometimes ancient tech can be just as good as high tech"
Tue Apr 14, 2015, 04:32 AM
Apr 2015

> They divert water during the rainy season, when big rivers overfloweth, to springs that then
> run year-round, essentially turning the landscape into a giant sponge that can be squeezed
> for water during the dry season.

And, by being sub-surface, will lose less to evaporation than a reservoir of the same capacity!

> And it’s a lot cheaper than a fancy new desalination plant.

I'm surprised that this wasn't a red rag to some of the regular bull merchants ...

Thanks for posting it - combining archeology with environmental studies in one brief article!



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