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Why was Roman Concrete Forgotten during the Middle Ages?
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For most of the same reason that most of what preceded it was forgotten and had to be re-invented like optical lens and large ship construction. Muslims.
Concrete became abstract during the Middle Ages.
Some guy named Brandon said it was unsustainable and they believed him....
In Britain, knowledge of building in stone completely disappeared. French stonemasons had to be imported to build the first stone Anglo-Saxon churches.
Roman concrete is really remarkable because it achieves a tensile strength equal to reinforced modern concrete without the Achilles heel of rusting rebar. It's also self-healing, meaning cracks exposed to water generate new crystals that seal the crack and re-bind the two halves.
It is very labor intensive, because it's too thick to pour. It's a thick paste that has to be rammed into the form.
Liberalism?
They also forgot how to Wash during the Middle Ages
Never mind the forgotten concrete. how did people forget about indoor plumbing, flush toilets, and baths during the Middle Ages?
Liberals were elected?
Christian navel gazing, internecine conflicts all over Europe in the vacuum left by the Romans, several waves of plague, and the fact that concrete isn’t a substance, it’s a whole technology that requires a variety of trained people, made it difficult to reproduce what the Romans did.
That video was interesting...thanks for posting it.
That's because the guys from Sicily had all of the cement contracts.
Mark
Domus Depot stores all closed?
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH—Modern concrete, when placed in the presence of sea water, erodes over time. According to a report in BBC News, scientists led by Marie Jackson of the University of Utah examined samples of ancient Roman concrete from ancient harbor structures with an electron microscope, X-ray micro-diffraction, and Raman spectroscopy in an effort to learn why it gained strength from exposure to sea water. The tests, conducted at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, revealed crystals of a rare mineral known as aluminum tobermorite growing throughout the samples of concrete, in addition to a porous mineral called phillipsite. The mineral crystals continued to grow in the Roman mix of volcanic ash and lime, which reinforced the concrete over long-term exposure to sea water. A similar chemical reaction has been detected in underwater volcanoes. “Their technique was based on building very massive structures that are really quite environmentally sustainable and very long-lasting,” Jackson said. To read in-depth about how Romans used concrete, go to “Rome’s Lost Aqueduct.”
https://web.uvic.ca/~jpoleson/ROMACONS/Caesarea2005.htm
https://www.archaeology.org/news/5710-170705-roman-ocean-concrete
It was causing globull warming and they banned it and used mud blocks instead because they were sustainable and renewable.