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Study Dates Human Remains Recovered From the River Thames
Archaeology Magazine ^ | February 12, 2025 | editors / Live Science

Posted on 02/24/2025 7:26:50 AM PST by SunkenCiv

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To: wildcard_redneck
Putting dead people into the very waters that you drink from is the height of stupidity.

All the major city's in Europe were built along side major rivers. The rivers were not for drinking they were for swage disposal and and anything else they wanted to get rid of.

That's why the Romans had to build all those aqueducts to bring in portable water.

21 posted on 02/24/2025 8:56:27 AM PST by usurper (AI was born with a birth defect.)
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To: usurper
That's why the Romans had to build all those aqueducts to bring in portable water.

I'm sure you meant potable water.

22 posted on 02/24/2025 9:21:11 AM PST by fidelis (👈 Under no obligation to respond to rude, ignorant, abusive, bellicose, and obnoxious posts.)
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To: fidelis

The Romans had wine to drink, but they needed plentiful clean water for the public baths.


23 posted on 02/24/2025 9:36:40 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

They also needed water to drink. They couldn’t usually drink plain water (unless it was directly out of a natural spring) because of the impurities, but for their meals they mixed it with wine. This also prevented them from getting drunk at every meal time.


24 posted on 02/24/2025 9:44:31 AM PST by fidelis (👈 Under no obligation to respond to rude, ignorant, abusive, bellicose, and obnoxious posts.)
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To: fidelis
I knew that the Greeks generally mixed water with their wine but couldn't remember if the Romans did so as well.

The modern Greek word for "wine" is krasi (with accent on the iota), from the ancient word krasis meaning mixture or blending. The modern word may have been originally a diminutive form (the little mixing).

25 posted on 02/24/2025 11:49:57 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: SunkenCiv
Drinking water certainly came from the Thames - before the origins of cholera were understood:

"John Snow used a dot map to illustrate the cluster of cholera cases around the pump. He also used statistics to illustrate the connection between the quality of the water source and cholera cases. He showed that homes supplied by the Southwark and Vauxhall Waterworks Company, which was taking water from sewage-polluted sections of the Thames, had a cholera rate fourteen times that of those supplied by Lambeth Waterworks Company, which obtained water from the upriver, cleaner Seething Wells. Snow's study was a major event in the history of public health and geography. It is regarded as the founding event of the science of epidemiology.

570-EF1-B3-C234-447-B-95-D4-FB0-C671-F795-E-4-5005-c

A replica of the pump without a handle stands outside the John Snow pub on Broadwick Street in Soho, London, commemorating Snow's discovery.

26 posted on 02/24/2025 5:17:59 PM PST by Bon of Babble (You Say You Want a Revolution?)
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