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In the early part of the first millennium B.C., Persians started constructing elaborate tunnel systems called ![]() |
There are significant advantages to a qanat water delivery system including: (1) putting the majority of the channel underground reduces water loss from seepage and evaporation; (2) since the system is fed entirely by gravity, the need for pumps is eliminated; and (3) it exploits groundwater as a renewable resource. The third benefit warrants additional discussion.
The rate of flow of water in a qanat is controlled by the level of the underground water table. Thus a qanatcannot cause significant drawdown in an aquifer because its flow varies directly with the subsurface water supply. When properly maintained, a qanat is a sustainable system that provides water indefinitely. The self-limiting featureof a qanat, however, is also its biggest drawback when compared to the range of technologies available today.
Water flows continuously in a
Thanks to early writers, we have excellent descriptions of the techniques used by ancient
Qanats are constructed by specialists. A windlass is set up at the surface and the excavated soil is hauled up in buckets (seephotograph 1). The spoil is dumped around the opening of the shaft to form a small mound; the latter feature keeps surface runoff from entering the shaft bringing silt and other contamination with it. A vertical shaft 1 meter in diameter is thus dug out. A gently sloping tunnel is then constructed which transports water from groundwater wells to the surface some distance away. If the soil is firm, no lining is required for the tunnel. In loose soil, reinforcing rings are installed at intervals in the tunnel to prevent cave-ins. These rings are usually made of burnt clay (seefigure 2). Mineral, salt, and other deposits which accumulate in the channel bed necessitate periodic cleaning and maintenance work.
In countries like Syria, qanats are rapidly drying up. In a recent exercise, three sites were chosen for renovation; each still had significant quantities of flowing water. The selection of these sites was based on a national survey conducted in 2001. The renovation of one the three (Drasiah qanat of Dmeir) was concluded in the spring of 2002.
Lessons learned from pilot projects like the one in Syria led to the development of renovation criteria which included: (i) a stable groundwater level, (ii) a consistent underground tunnel construction; (iii) social cohesion in the community using the qanat; (iv) existing system of water rights and regulation; and (vi) willingness of the water users to contribute. Cleaning of an ancient qanat is not an easy exercise. Not only is the work technically difficult, but also the social organization associated with a qanat has major implications on its future viability (Wessels, 2000).
The precise dating of qanats is difficult, unless their construction was accompanied by documentation or, occasionally, by inscriptions. Most of the evidence we have for the age of qanats is circumstantial; a result of their association with the ceramics or ruins of ancient sites whose chronologies have been established through archeological investigation, or the qanat technology being introduced long ago by people whose temporal pattern of diffusion is known.
Written records leave little doubt that ancient Iran (Persia) was the birthplace of the
During the period 550-331 BC, when Persian rule extended from the Indus to the Nile,
During Roman-Byzantine era (64 BC to 660 AD), many qanats were constructed in Syria and Jordan. From here, the technology appears have to diffused north and west into Europe. There is evidence of Roman qanats as far away as the Luxembourg area.
The expansion of Islam initiated another major diffusion of
While the above diffusion model is nice and neat (see Figure 3), human activities are rarely so orderly.
Even more dramatically,
An extensive system of
Qanats are still found throughout the regions that came under the cultural sphere of the Persians, Romans, and Arabs. The
The Palestinians and their neighbors had for some 2000 years irrigated terraces of olive groves, vineyards, and orchards with water tapped from some 250
Qanats are to this day the major source of irrigation water for the fields and towering hillside terraces that occupy parts of Oman and Yemen. They have for some 2000 years allowed the villages of the desert fringes of the Arabian Peninsula to grow their own wheat as well as alfalfa to feed their livestock. In these villages, there are complex ownerships of water rights and distribution canals. In Oman, their importance was underlined in the 1980s with a government-funded repair and upgrade program.
While an underground stream is called a
In some cities, water in
Where tunnels run beneath houses, private access points provide water for various domestic uses. In wealthy homes, special rooms are constructed beside the underground stream with tall shafts reaching upward to windtowers above roof level. Air caught bythe windtowers, which are oriented to prevailing summer winds, is forced down the shaft, circulates at water level, and provides a cool refuge from the afternoon heat of summer.
Dr. Dale Lightfoot at the Oklahoma State University has been using anecdotal information on
Dr. Lightfoot has concluded that the diminishing and abandonment of
Qanats are found over much of Syria, a "breadbasket" of the Roman, Byzantine, and the later Islamic empires. After the world price for cotton increased in the 1950s, the Syrian government encouraged farmers to produce more cotton to increase foreign exchange earnings. The widespread installation of groundwater pumps has successfully antiquated the old qanat technology across most of the country. A map showing the distribution of Syrian
Dr. Jerry Buzzell described his experience visiting a qanat (falaj) in Mahdah, Oman. "This falaj begins in the hills above town, with a very deep well to the aquifer. From there, tunnels have been dug channeling the water to the town by gravity. In town, the falaj is a concrete trough, about a foot deep and twofeet wide, and the water flows swiftly."
"The falaj is communal, its water available to all, up to a (specific) point. Beyond this point, the water is distributed into different channels, owned by different families, to irrigate date palms."
"Water flow into each channel is controlled by a metal plate across the falaj, which is lifted (to allow water to flow into the channel) or lowered (to hold it back). The water is distributed to the different channels for periods of time which depend upon factors such as the contribution of the families to the construction and maintenance of the system, rents paid, etc."
"In the middle of the narrow space beside the falaj is a very basic sundial–a narrow rod stuck in the ground, with the hours marked out with stones on either side of it–which is their method of timekeeping and the basis of the distribution of the water (during daytime hours when the sun is shining)."
Dr. Buzzell was in Mahdah on a Friday and noted the falaj was being used for ritual cleaning in preparation for prayers. "A lovely old man wearing a loincloth was sitting in the water, lathering his body with soap, his white beard and the white fringe around his bald pate encircling twinkling eyes and gap-toothed grin."
"When he was satisfied with his scrubbing, he lay down lengthwise in the falaj and allowed the water to run over him, head to toe, washing the soap away with the dirt and leaving him clean enough to pray."
Qanats were frequently used for domestic purposes, as well as irrigation. Because of this, they can transport disease vectors (Afkhami, 1997). A chemical analysis of water, conducted in 1924, from 6
Throughout Iran, even if the qanat water was uninfected before entering the cities, it had ample opportunity to become contaminated while traversing the urban areas in open ditches. With the lack of proper sewage and waste disposal throughout Iranian municipalities, the cholera bacterium easily made its way into drinking water.
Qanats can be used for cooling as well as water supply (Bahadori, p. 149). One technology operates in conjunction with a wind tower. The arid regions of Iran have fairly fixed seasonal and daily wind patterns. The wind tower harnesses the prevailing summer winds to cool and circulate it through a building. A typical wind tower resembles a chimney, with one end in the basement of the building and the other end rising from the roof. Wind tower technologies date back over 1000 years.
The passive cooling of a wind tower can be enhanced by connecting it to an underground stream or qanat. In the system shown infigure 4, a shaft (b) connects the qanat to the basement of the building to be cooled. Hot dry air enters the qanat through one of its vertical shafts (a) and is cooled as it flows along the water. Since the underground water is usually cold, the rate of cooling is quite high. The wind tower is placed so that wind flowing through the basement door of the tower passes over the top of the qanat tunnel. When the air flows from a large passage (the tunnel) through a smaller one (the door), its pressure decreases. The pressure of the air from the tower is still diminished when it passes over the top of the tunnel, so that cold moist air from the shaft is entrained by the flow of cooled air from the tower (c). The mixture of air from the qanat and air from the tower (d) circulates through the basement. A single qanat can serve several wind-tower systems.
A qanat system has a profound influence on the lives of the water users. It allows those living in a desert environment adjacent to a mountain watershed to create a large oasis in an otherwise stark environment. The United Nations and other organizations are encouraging the revitalization of traditional water harvesting and supply technologies in arid areas because they feel it is important for sustainable water utilization.
Afkhami, A., 1997, "Disease and Water Supply: The Case of Cholera in 19th Century Iran," Proceedings of Conference: Transformations of Middle Eastern Natural Environments: Legacies and Lessons, Yale University, October.
Bahadori, M. N., 1978, "Passive Cooling Systems in Iranian Architecture,"
Beekman, C. S., P. S. Weigand, and J. J. Pint, 1999, "Old World Irrigation Technology in a New World Context: Qanats in Spanish Colonial Western Mexico,"
English, P., 1997,
Lightfoot, D., 2003, "Traditional Wells as Phreatic Barometers: A View from Qanats and Tube Wells in Developing Arid Lands," Proceedings of the UCOWR Conference: Water Security in the 21st Century, Washington, DC, July.
Pazwash, N. 1983. "Iran's Mode of Modernization: Greening the Desert, Deserting the Greenery,"
United Nationals Environmental Programme, 1983.
Wessels, K (2000), Renovating Qanats in a changing world, a case study in Syria, paper presented to the International Syposuim on Qanats, May 2000, Yazd, Iran.
Wulff, H.E., 1968, "The Qanats of Iran,"
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