eduFacts
Most of us prefer visual images to written text, and the broad scope of civil engineering is best explained using images. These pages contain a combination of text and graphics to introduce you to the field of civil engineering. Where possible, we've given credit to the copyright holder or photographer if we've erred, or neglected to give credit where due, please write and let us know.
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Aqueducts &
the Arch The Romans built this two-tiered aqueduct 1900
years ago without mortar and it still functions today.
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Galileo & the
Birth of Mechanics of Materials The remarkable Italian
scientist attempted to define mathematically the fundamental principles
of stress analysis and material behavior.
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the Glulam Tree
This innovative and whimsical structure mimics the way
that trees support loads and makes full use of the potential of
glued-laminated timber, or glulam, as it is more commonly known.
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the Golden Gate
Bridge Still considered by many to be the classic suspension
bridge of all time. Includes a brief explanation of the engineering
principles behind a suspension bridge.
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the Great Wall
of China This 3200 kilometer marvel is said to be the
only man-made object on the earth visible from space.
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the Ironbridge
Built in 1779, this bridge over the Severn River in England
was the first bridge in the world built using cast iron as its primary
material.
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Painting a
highway Why would you paint a highway? And how would
you go about it if you wanted to?
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Earthquakes
101 Do you know that the 1949 Queen Charlotte Islands
earthquake (magnitude 8.1) was the most severe Canadian earthquake
in the 20th century? Learn more with this tutorial on earthquakes
and seismicity.
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