In the center of the small town of Selchuk in Turkey there is a Roman-era canal monument, which was built in the third century to supply water to Ephesus, 3 kilometers from Selchuk, a Greek city built in the 10th century BC. It fell under Roman control in 129 BC and was destroyed by an earthquake in 614 AD.
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In the center of the small town of Selchuk in Turkey there is a Roman-era canal monument, which was built in the third century to supply water to Ephesus, 3 kilometers from Selchuk, a Greek city built in the 10th century BC. It fell under Roman control in 129 BC and was destroyed by an earthquake in 614 AD.
In the legacy buildings, you can vaguely see some of the appearance at the time, but still do not understand, then technology is not so developed now, but their wisdom is also very endless
Byzantine canals, located in a small square not far from the train station in Selchuk, a historical monument that went intermittently from east to west, can not be seen at all that was once a canal, now every year, egrets come here to build nests on the top of the ruins...
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Byzantine canals - not to mention that no one knows this is a canal, only the ruins are left, by imagination, guess it should be a canal, it can be seen that the wisdom of the ancient Roman period is no less than the current people, many crafts and even stunts, So it leaves us with so many puzzles.