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Jeff
Matthews 2002-2012 entry
Sept 2009
The
Apulian Aqueduct
The Italian
region of Puglia (darkened section in map, right)
forms the back of the boot of the Italian peninsula,
extending from the Gargano spur down the Adriatic
some 500 km (300 miles) to the town of Santa Maria
di Leuca at the very tip of the heel, where
tradition says that Aeneas first landed and where
the apostle Peter landed to start his Christianizing
of Italy. That part of the peninsula has always been
known as arid and, indeed, Puglia’s famous son,
Horace, described his native land 2,000 years ago as
having a “thirst that rises to the stars.” Even
today, as you drive along modern roads, your eye is
drawn to the presence along the ground of cisterns
carved out of rock for the catchment of rainwater.
A solution to the
eternal thirst of the area arrived in the form of
the Apulian aqueduct, one of the largest
construction projects undertaken in the early 20th
century in Italy. Construction was started in 1906
and declared finished in 1939. That period included
interruptions by Italy’s involvement in WWI. There
was then some damage to the aqueduct in WW II, and
there has been frequent work and expansion over the
last 70 years.
A bridge
section of the Apulian
aqueduct in the province of Bari
The plan was
ingenious: since there were no truly useful rivers
to channel in Puglia, engineers went north and
tapped the headwaters of the Sele River in the
mountains near Avellino in the Campania region, on
the other (western) side of the Apennine watershed.
The Sele flows naturally down to the west for 64 km
to empty into the Gulf of Salerno near Paestum, but
the aqueduct rerouted some of the water back across
the watershed and distributed it to the east through
1,600 kilometers of main and branch lines. A report
in the New York Times in 1914 on the ongoing project
said, “...it is on a scale which gives it rank in
the history of civilization as an ambitious
project.” The plan called for the piercing of the
Apennine range with a tunnel of 15 km (9.4 miles) to
get the water to the eastern side of the mountains.
Twenty-thousand workers were on the job, and the
project was due to be finished by 1916. That didn’t
happen, but the first section, bringing freshwater
to Bari, was in operation by 1915.
Graphically,
the layout of the Apulian aqueduct is not that of a
single water conduit, but more like a web laid over
the landscape, which accounts for the considerable
total length. Today, the entire length of the
aqueduct, including primary and secondary lines is
2189 km (1360 miles), serving the more than 4
million inhabitants in the 258 cities, towns and
villages in the 6 provinces that make up the region
of Puglia. Along its length, the aqueduct passes
through 99 tunnels (109 km/67 miles in total length)
and over 91 bridges. Ideally, the flow from the Sele
into the system is 4000 liters (1,056 US/880
imperial gallons) a second. In 1964, a second feeder
source, the Calore river, was joined to the aqueduct
to increase the supply of water. Problems with
maintenance, including those arising from the 1980
earthquake in the south, have not always allowed the
system to function at ideal capacity.
Upgrades are
always in progress somewhere along the length. These
might include modernization such as electronic flow
control as well as simply looking for leaks and
illegal taps along the line. The aqueduct is run by
the Acquedotto
Pugliese corporation, an agency that also
takes care of other items of hydrological import in
Puglia such as 10,000 km of sewage lines, 170 water
purification plants, artificial catchment basins,
artesian wells and desalinization plants.
other entries on
aqueducts: (1)
(2) (3)
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