The English Channel Tunnel

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
C. J. Kirkland
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
22
File Size:
727 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1987

Abstract

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND For two thousand years and more, we insular Britons have been grateful for the existence of the narrow strip of water which seperates us from mainland Europe. It has given us a sense of security against invaders, though it has been breached many times. The first recorded serious consideration of a fixed crossing of the English Channel was in around 1802, when it was suggested to Napoleon I. The motive was not entirely peacable and the British Navy, who saw themselves as defenders of our shores, were decidedly unenthusiastic. A whole series of imaginative schemes were proposed in the course of the nineteenth century, embracing viaducts, immersed tubes, artificial islands as resting places for the horses which were to draw carriages, as well as mechanically bored tunnels. The first Channel Tunnel Company was formed in 1872, and an application for permission to construct a tunnel was made to the British Parliament. A Colonel Beaumont, of the Corps of Royal Engineers designed and constructed a machine which, in around 1882, bored over a mile of tunnel out to sea from Britain which exists to this day.
Citation

APA: C. J. Kirkland  (1987)  The English Channel Tunnel

MLA: C. J. Kirkland The English Channel Tunnel. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1987.

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