The Engineering of Ancient Irrigation
In Egypt, the predictable annual flooding of the Nile shaped a different approach. Rather than fighting the river, Egyptians practised basin irrigation, trapping floodwater behind earthen banks so that it soaked the soil and deposited fertile mud. When the water receded, crops were sown in the moist earth. This method demanded careful timing and an understanding of the flood's rhythm, knowledge that was recorded and passed down by officials.
Perhaps the most ingenious system was the qanat, developed in ancient Persia. A qanat is a gently sloping underground tunnel that carries water from an aquifer in the hills to fields and settlements far below, sometimes over many kilometres. Because the channel is underground, very little water is lost to evaporation in the hot climate. Vertical shafts dug at intervals allowed workers to remove soil during construction and provided access for later repairs. Qanats spread westward to North Africa and eastward toward China, demonstrating how a single idea could travel along trade routes.
In the Americas, civilisations in the Andes built terraced fields linked by stone-lined canals, while farmers in arid coastal valleys constructed long aqueducts to capture seasonal rains. These achievements were accomplished without the wheel or iron tools, relying instead on careful observation and communal effort. The legacy of these ancient systems endures: some qanats and canals are still in use today, a testament to the durability of designs created thousands of years ago.