Cyprus, As I Saw It In 1879 By Sir Samuel White Baker





















































 -  This vast mass of soil, which adds
a corresponding weight to each gallon of water, is carried forward
according to - Page 117
Cyprus, As I Saw It In 1879 By Sir Samuel White Baker - Page 117 of 524 - First - Home

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This Vast Mass Of Soil, Which Adds A Corresponding Weight To Each Gallon Of Water, Is Carried Forward According To The Velocity Of The Stream, And Is Ready To Deposit Upon The Instant That The Propelling Power Shall Be Withdrawn.

So long as the river is confined between narrow banks, the high rate of the current is sufficient to

Force forward the thickened and heavy fluid; but the instant that the banks are over-topped and the river expands over an increased area, the rapidity is reduced, and the water, no longer able to contain the earth in solution, deposits alluvium, and produces a delta, which must necessarily increase upon every future inundation. The result must end either in forming a bar at the mouth of the river, or (as in the Pedias) in THE TOTAL SILTING OF THE EMBOUCHURE, which extinguishes all traces of a broad channel, but leaves a series of deep marshes scored by innumerable ditches, to be in their turn filled with mud when the next flood shall extend over the wide surface and increase the deposit.

This is the position of the Pedias, and until improved I cannot foresee a good sanitary prospect for Famagousta, which is situated on the borders of the swamp. There can be only one engineering method of preventing the silt, by confining the river between artificial banks, within a channel sufficiently narrow to ensure a current whose velocity would carry the heavy fluid directly into the sea. Even should this be accomplished, and the river be securely banked, the deposit of mud will then take place within the sea, and will assuredly form a bar; which will probably affect by silt the neighbouring harbour of Famagousta in the same manner that the ancient port of Salamis has been completely obliterated.

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