physorg.com— Archaeologists excavating a sprawling prehistoric fortress in southern Greece have discovered a secret underground passage thought to have supplied the site with water in times of danger.
Aug 25, 2007View in Crawl 4
So does this count as an aqueduct? If so, the Greeks had it before the Romans. The Romans were so influenced and inspired by the ancient Greeks (hell, we are still today), if we discover that the Greeks also had concrete before the Romans I wouldn't be surprised.
sideshowxelaAug 26, 2007
Matter of fact, wait, no.
magiccakeAug 26, 2007
Dugg up to counteract the digging down by people not understanding the classic reference to Monopoly.
magiccakeAug 26, 2007
How could that possibly get dugg down? It's a true statement, it's not like you can argue against it.
mrteaAug 26, 2007
pics or it didn't happen!
mojiraAug 26, 2007
So does this count as an aqueduct? If so, the Greeks had it before the Romans. The Romans were so influenced and inspired by the ancient Greeks (hell, we are still today), if we discover that the Greeks also had concrete before the Romans I wouldn't be surprised.
str3amaAug 26, 2007
no it's still a mystery to this day. Some say that it was most likely some sort of oil - but it still yet to be proven empircally.
rome420Apr 29, 2008
old and archaic doesn't instantly equate to prehistoric. interesting article thoughcheck out Rhodes.com for more articles and images
made18Jun 24, 2008
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