Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Lake Homs Dam

Ancient dam near Homs, Syria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lake Homs Dam
Remove ads

The Lake Homs Dam, also known as Qattinah Dam, is a Roman-built dam near the city of Homs, Syria, which is in use to this day.

Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...
Remove ads
Remove ads

History

Contrary to an older hypothesis which tentatively linked the origins of the dam to Egyptian ruler Sethi (1319–1304 BC), the structure dates to 284 AD when it was built by the Roman emperor Diocletian (284–305 AD) for irrigation purposes.[2] With a capacity of 90 million m3, it is considered the largest Roman reservoir in the Near East[3] and might have even been the largest artificial reservoir constructed up to that time.[4] Remarkably, the reservoir has suffered very little silting since.[5]

Thumb
Lake Homs Dam, with its Roman tower, 1921

The 2 km long and 7 m high masonry gravity dam consists of a Roman concrete core protected by basalt blocks.[6] The slightly pointed curvature of the dam follows the course of a long ridge of basalt and thus bears only superficial resemblance to an arch dam.[6]

In 1938, the level of the dam was raised[vague], increasing the volume of water the artificial lake holds to 200 million m3.[7]

Remove ads

See also

References

Sources

Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads