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    <title>Ancient Infrastructure on Ancient Rome</title>
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      <title>Water Across the Empire: Roman Aqueducts and the Hydraulic Logic of Conquest</title>
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      <description>&lt;p&gt;The stone arch does not announce itself. It simply continues — span after span across flat agricultural land, indifferent to the centuries accumulating around it. The aqueduct near Nahariya in western Galilee, its kurkar limestone worn to the color of dry earth, carried water to the coastal settlements of ancient Ptolemais long before the Crusaders reinforced its arches and the Ottomans extended its reach. That layering is not incidental. It is the story of Roman hydraulic engineering in miniature: infrastructure so rationally conceived that every subsequent empire found it easier to inherit than to replace.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>The Pont du Gard: Rome&#39;s Most Perfect Structure</title>
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      <description>&lt;p&gt;There is a moment, approaching the Pont du Gard from the riverbank below, when the structure stops looking ancient and starts looking inevitable. Three tiers of limestone arches rising 49 meters above the Gardon river in southern France, built without mortar, without iron clamps, without any binding agent beyond the weight of precisely cut stone on stone. It was constructed around 50 CE to carry water 50 kilometers from springs near Uzès to the Roman colony of Nemausus — modern Nîmes. It has been standing for nearly two thousand years. It looks like it intends to stand for two thousand more.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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