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The Panama Canal

TitleThe Panama Canal
# of Words833
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)3.33

The Panama Canal



The Panama Canal


     The canal is joining the atlantic and pacific oceans.  It runs from
Cristobal on lemon bay, a part of the Caribbean sea, to Balboa, on the Gulf of
Panama.  The canal is slightly more than 64 km long, not including the dredged
approach channels at either end.  The minimum depth is 12.5 m, and the minimum
width is 91.5 m.  The construction of the canal ranks as one of the greatest
engineering works of all time.

     In history people had interest in a shorter route from the Atlantic to
Pacific.  This began with the explorers of Central America early in the 16th
century.  Hernan Cortez was a spanish conqeror of mexico who suggested a canal
across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.  Other explorers had favored routes through
Nicaragua and Darien.  The 1 st for a canal through the Panama was started by
Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, Who in 1523 ordered a survey of the isthmus.  A
working plan for the canal was drawn up as early as 1529, but was shown to the
king.  In 1534 a spanish offical suggested a canal route close to that of the
present canal.  Later more of the canal plans were suggested but no action was
taken upon any of these plans suggested.

     Later on there is more in the canal.  The Spanish goverment abandoned
its interest in the canal but in the early 19 th century the books of the
Germam scientist Alexander von Humboldt brang back the interest in the project
of the canal, and in 1819the Spanish goverment formally athorized the
construction of a canal and the creation of a company to build it.  Nothing
came of this effort, however, and the revolt of the spanish colonies soon took
control of possible canal sites out of spanish hands . The republics of
Central America tried to interest groups in the United States and Europe in
building a canal, and it became a subject of perennial debate in the congress
of the United States.  The discovery of gold in California in 1848 and the rush
of would-be miners started the United States interest in digging the canal.
Various surveys made between 1850 and 1875 indicated that only two routes were
practical, the one across Panama and that across Nicargua.  In 1876 an
international company was organized.  Two years later it obtained a consession
from the Colombian goverment.  Panama was then part of Colombia to dig a canal
across the isthmus.

     The United States involvement was the international company failed, and
in 1880 a French company was organized by Ferdinand Marie de Lesseps, the
builder of the Suez Canal.  His company went bankrupt in 1889. United States
interest in a Atlantic-Pacific canal howe...

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