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  2. Pennsylvania Canal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Canal

    Lehigh Canal, White Haven to Easton, Grand Canal 72 miles (116 km) (1848-1862) The Lehigh was built in two stages, the lower canal running 46.2 miles (74.4 km) built in 1818-1820 connected the coal fields from the slack water pool at Jim Thorpe to Easton on the Delaware River, where it provided coal to the Delaware & Raritan Canal to New York ...

  3. Grand Canal (China) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Canal_(China)

    The Grand Canal (Chinese: 大运河; pinyin: Dà yùnhé) is a system of interconnected canals linking various major rivers in North and East China, serving as an important waterborne transport infrastructure between the north and the south during Medieval and premodern China.

  4. Roebling's Delaware Aqueduct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roebling's_Delaware_Aqueduct

    To raise the canal enough to allow the passage of ice floes and river traffic, Lord's plan called for three locks to be built on the eastern side. [4] [better source needed] An immediate success, the Delaware Aqueduct — which cost $41,750 – and the Lackawaxen Aqueduct — which cost $18,650, and of which only the abutments remain ...

  5. Great Recycling and Northern Development Canal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Recycling_and...

    The GRAND Canal system would also deliver new fresh water from the James Bay dyke-enclosure, via the Great Lakes, to many water deficit areas in Canada and the United States. The project was estimated in 1994 to cost C$100 billion to build and a further C$1 billion annually to operate, involving a string of nuclear reactors and hydroelectric ...

  6. Grand Canal of Versailles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Canal_of_Versailles

    The Grand Canal of Versailles is the largest basin in the park of the Palace of Versailles. Cross-shaped, it was built between 1667 and 1679, at the instigation of André Le Nôtre . Prior to this date, the park was closed by a gate and ended behind the Bassin des Cygnes .

  7. Grand Canal (Venice) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Canal_(Venice)

    The Grand Canal (Italian: Canal Grande [kaˌnal ˈɡrande], locally and informally Canalazzo; Venetian: Canal Grando, locally usually Canałaso [kanaˈɰaso]) is the largest channel in Venice, Italy, forming one of the major water-traffic corridors in the city.

  8. Inside the $5.5 billion canal that will connect Paris to ...

    www.aol.com/news/inside-5-5-billion-canal...

    In a corner of northeast France, the ground rumbles with industry. After multiple false starts and much political back and forth, work is underway on the Seine-Nord Europe Canal (SNEC), a €5.1 ...

  9. Chain-link fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain-link_fencing

    Chain-link fencing showing the diamond patterning A chain-link fence bordering a residential property. A chain-link fence (also referred to as wire netting, wire-mesh fence, chain-wire fence, cyclone fence, hurricane fence, or diamond-mesh fence) is a type of woven fence usually made from galvanized or linear low-density polyethylene-coated steel wire.