From the History of Dam Construction

Dams have a history just as long as such branches of civil engineering as bridge building, road construction and the laying down of canals. Not only do dams represent some of the most impressive achievements of engineers over the centuries but their vital role in supplying water to towns and cities, irrigating dry lands, providing a sources of [power and controlling floods is more than sufficient to rank dam building among the most essential aspects of man’s attempts to harness, control and improve his environment.

In antiquity dams were built as an essential part of the need to practice irrigation on which the production of food was based. It was not until the Roman came on the scene trhat the size of dams was increased and new uses were found, such as the application of dams to problems of flood control and protection. The most important contribution, however, was the reservoir dam which, to a large extent, was a result of the Roman’s concern with the water supply to cities and towns. That they were able to build so many big dams, many of which have lasted for a very long time and survived, despite eighteen centuries of use and neglect, was also a result of their evolving better methods of construction based on better materials, especially hydraulic mortar and concrete. Moreover, proper attention was paid to hydraulic problems to ensure that the water could not percolate through the dams and that when it overflowed them, spillways were provided.

The Industrial Revolution contributed much to the further development of water resources not only for water supply purposes but also for water wheels, and, later, in the 19-th century, for their logical successor - water turbines. In their mode of operation, particularly that of reaction turbines, it was a fundamentally new idea closely linked with an improved understanding of hydrodynamics. The development of electric generators refers to the major scientific discoveries in the early part of the century, and one feature of electric power was of supreme significance, namely, that it is only form of energy in a ready-to-use state which can be transmitted over long distances.

One of the greatest advantages of a water-power station is that it utilizes an energy carrier which renews itself constantly and does not exhaust energy resources. This makes its maintenance costs relatively low.

With the discovery of a generator three separate seemingly diverse branches of engineering, those concerning dams, water turbines and electric generators, came together to found a new branch of power generation utilizing hydropower resources. All the three elements have undergone changes in the height, volume and efficiency.

Model analysis, a technique for stimulating the complex behaviour of a structure, a dam, for instance, promotes a reliable forecast in designing new schemes and in the transformation and modernization of the old ones to increase their efficiencies.