Vision And Human Engineering - How They Enter Into The Day's Work

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Eugene McAuliffe
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
14
File Size:
437 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1932

Abstract

In the year 1581, the counselors of King Philip of Spain suggested to that monarch that a canal across the Isthmus of Darien would open the west coast of the South American continent to Spanish miners and explorers, enlarging and expanding the flow of precious metals then just beginning to trickle across the path cut by Spanish Conquistadors, from old Panama to Puerto Bello on the east coast. The King sent out a party of surveyors and explorers under the command of a young engineer, Savadaerro, who returned after two years, reporting upon a location for a canal which was virtually adopted by the French engineers employed by De Lesseps, who in 1877 commenced the work of constructing the Panama Canal-296 years after Sava- daerro's first survey was begun. The suggestion for an Isthmian canal, made to the king at a time when Spain was a proud, virile nation and when that country was contending with England in the fields of discovery and conquest, represents a measure of vision that has never failed to intrigue the imagination. That the young Spanish engineer recommended an undertaking so gigantic in conception that it took three and one-third centuries for its completion from the time it was first visioned matters little. In the day of Philip of Spain,
Citation

APA: Eugene McAuliffe  (1932)  Vision And Human Engineering - How They Enter Into The Day's Work

MLA: Eugene McAuliffe Vision And Human Engineering - How They Enter Into The Day's Work. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1932.

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