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aqueduct
Aqueducts in Italy were used to bring water to cities and towns, like Rome. Aqueducts supplied pubic baths, latrines, fountains and private households with water. Aqueducts were on a slight angle so that the water could flow. There was no technology and machinery helping the water flow, it was simply gravity. Rome had eleven aqueducts by third AD. They sustained a population of over one million. Roman aqueducts were mostly reliable and durable. A few aqueducts are still partly in use today.
Aqua marcia
Aqua Marcia is an aqueduct in Rome. Out of the eleven aqueducts in Rome, Aqua Marcia was the longest, measuring 91.424km. Aqua Marcia took four years to build. It started getting built in 144BC and was finished in 140BC.