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  2. Defensive wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defensive_wall

    A defensive wall is a fortification usually used to protect a city, town or other settlement from potential aggressors. The walls can range from simple palisades or earthworks to extensive military fortifications such as curtain walls with towers, bastions and gates for access to the city. [1]

  3. Rubble masonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubble_masonry

    Rubble masonry or rubble stone is rough, uneven building stone not laid in regular courses. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It may fill the core of a wall which is faced with unit masonry such as brick or ashlar . Some medieval cathedral walls have outer shells of ashlar with an inner backfill of mortarless rubble and dirt.

  4. Rubble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubble

    Rubble-work on Wyggeston's Chantry House in Leicester, built c. 1511 "Rubble-work" is a name applied to several types of masonry. [1] One kind, where the stones are loosely thrown together in a wall between boards and grouted with mortar almost like concrete, is called in Italian "muraglia di getto" and in French "bocage". [1]

  5. Why Do People Build Walls? The Real Story of Jericho ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/why-people-build-walls-real...

    The best we can say is that walls have been with us as long as there has been an “us.” ...

  6. Masonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masonry

    A mason laying a brick on top of the mortar Bridge over the Isábena river in the Monastery of Santa María de Obarra, masonry construction with stones. Masonry is the craft of building a structure with brick, stone, or similar material, including mortar plastering which are often laid in, bound, and pasted together by mortar.

  7. Stubborn Shanghai residents hold a line drawn in rubble

    www.aol.com/article/2016/05/09/stubborn-shanghai...

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  8. Core-and-veneer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core-and-veneer

    Core-and-veneer, brick and rubble, wall and rubble, ashlar and rubble, and emplekton all refer to a building technique where two parallel walls are constructed and the core between them is filled with rubble or other infill, creating one thick wall. [1] Originally, and in later poorly constructed walls, the rubble was not consolidated.

  9. The most underreported and important story in AI right now is ...

    www.aol.com/finance/most-underreported-important...

    The first signs that the pure scaling of data and compute might in fact be hitting a wall came from industry leaks from people like famed investor Marc Andreessen, who said in early November 2024 ...