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PowerPoint PresentationSlide 2Slide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 11Slide 12Slide 13Slide 14Slide 15Slide 16Slide 17Slide 18Slide 19Slide 20Slide 21Slide 22Slide 23Slide 24Slide 25Slide 26Slide 27Slide 28Slide 29Slide 30Slide 31The Suez CanalBackgroundGeologyNhttp://www.napoleon.org/en/special_dossier/suez/ConstructionDredger with a long chute.In the areas where the canal was at its widest, the chutes reached sixty meters long. In order to the maintain the equilibrium of the dredger ensemble, semi-cylindrical chutes, sixty centimeters deep, were carried on reinforced posts placed on a barge. The canal banks here are protected from erosion caused by passing boats by riprap.Dredger with a 45 meter chute.The machines used for widening the Suez canal were for the most part entirely metal, floating dredgers. The heavy scoops attached to an endless chain and driven by a steam engine removed mud sand and gravel from the bed and dumped the extracted material via the chute, a sheet metal pipe cut in half.The chutes directed the extracted waste onto the bank and the workers kept the waste flowing using a sort of rake. Two dredgers could thus work at a distance of only two metres.Dredger with a Dumper.In the lakes or near the sea, excavation was done using dredgers with dumpers. The dredger is shown here raised up awaiting a barge to take the debris away.Dredger and Nud Barge.The excavated mud was loaded onto nud barges which transported it either to the deeper waterways or to the sides of the lakes.Ship and Dredger.At every step of the way, the boats using the Suez canal passed machines engaged in widening the canal, without, it would seem, any difficulty.Excavation on dry land to widen the canalIn the areas where the terrain was particularly hard, more traditional methods were used to widen the canal: debris was extracted by hand, using picks, and loaded into crates which were carried to the dump by camels.Close Up of dredger and crew.A crew poses for a picture on their dredger.Widening of the canal. Work to protect the canal banks.The Egyptian navvies dug out the earth using a sort of local pick, called a fass. The overseers here sitting on the bank look on. A drainage pump, driven by a steam engine set up in a hut, helped prevent the trenches becoming waterlogged.Work to widen the canal.Trucks full of debris have just unloaded their loads onto the side whilst a worker holds a graduated leveling rod to indicate the level at which the debris should be.Port Said. View of the town port.After an obligatory stop so as to complete the administrative formalities and to pay the rights of passage, ships from the Mediterranean then entered the canal.Port Said. Company workshops. Fitting and founding.The workshops were divided according to their tasks: in one hulls and engines were repaired, whilst in another fitting and founding was done; yet others were reserved for smelting, woodwork and carpentry.Port Said. The Arsenal dock. Company workshop.Built during the digging of the canal, the great workshops of Port Said were heavily involved in the construction work. In them the excavation machinery was assembled, and the various types of vessels were maintained and repaired from the damage which occurred during their passage through the canal.Ismailia. De Lesseps’s house.A one-time diplomat, Ferdinand de Lesseps created the Compagnie universelle du canal maritime de Suez (The Universal Company of the Maritime Suez Canal), and made himself president. In Ismailia, on the Mohammed-Ali quay he had built a house facing the freshwater canal, and it was here that he lived when he stayed on the isthmus. To the right can be seen the roof of the permanent residence of the engineer Voisin, the man who directed the construction work for the company until the opening ceremony.Ismailia. Lodgings for Company mechanics.Trees were planted along the wide streets of Ismailia so as to provide some shade from the fierce sun. Ismailia was the administrative capital of the Suez Company. Here the clothes and buildings are in imitation of the those of Paris.SuezPort Ibrahim dry dockHere workers could repair hulls and perform other maintenance duties on ships.Port ThewfikHardly in existence before the construction of the canal, this city at the canal’s exit into the Gulf of Suez and the Red Sea boomed after the canal’s completion.Isolation barges for pilots in quarantine.The Universal Suez Canal Company was very concerned about the health of its employees. When epidemics broke out, isolations barges had to be built to provide places of quarantine in which to care for the sick workers.The Official Stand at the Inauguration of the Canal, 29 November, 1869After it was opened to navigation in 1869, the 163 km (101 mi) Suez Canal measured 8m (26 feet) deep, 22m (72 feet) wide at the bottom, and 70m ( 230 feet) wide at the surface. It is the longest canal with no locks. Military Conflict• 1936 - Egypt signs treaty allowing Britain to keep military forces in canal zone.• 1948 - Egypt begins preventing all Israeli ships from using canal.• 1951, Sep 1 - UN Security Council orders Egypt to open canal to Israeli ships.• Meanwhile, Egypt is talking trash against Israel.• 1955, Aug 31 - Gamal Abdel Nasser, Egyptian President, announces fedayeen.• 1956, July 26 - Egypt seizes canal and declares it a national asset.• 1956, October 29 - Israel launches the Sinai Campaign.• 1956, October 30 - The Israel UN representative explains the situation to the UN.BackgroundThe Sinai Campaign(1956)• 100,000 soldiers mobilized in 72 hrs.• Israeli Airforce operational in 43 hours.• Israel advances unopposed until halted by demands of England and France backers.• Egypt given a chance to withdraw, claiming to be the “victims”.• Oct 30th - US sponsors a UN resolution demanding an immediate Israeli withdrawal, but France and Britain veto it and begin bombing Egyptian airfields near Suez.• Israel continues the fight capturing almost the entire Sinai by November 5th. The British and the French land paratroops and


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Missouri S&T GEO ENG 342 - Suez Canal

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