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"To
waste, to destroy our natural resources,
to skin and exhaust the land instead
of using it so as to increase its
usefulness, will result in undermining
in the days of our children the very
prosperity which we ought by right
to hand down to them amplified and
developed".
US
President Theodore Roosevelt
Seventh Annual Message
3rd December 1907
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History of earlier Dredging Efforts
The Palk Strait
waters are shallow and not easily navigable.
Thus, traffic has been limited to small boats
and dinghies. Larger ocean-going vessels from
the West have had to navigate around Sri Lanka
to reach India's eastern coast. Eminent British
geographer Major James Rennell, who surveyed
the region as a young officer in the late eighteenth
century, suggested that a "navigable passage
could be maintained by dredging the strait of
Ramisseram [sic]". However little notice
was given to his proposal, perhaps because it
came from "so young and unknown an officer",
and the idea was only revived 60 years later.
In 1823, Sir Arthur Cotton a British general
and irrigation engineer was trusted with the
responsibility of surveying the Pamban channel,
which separates the Indian mainland from the
island of Rameswaram and forms the first link
of Ram Setu. Geological evidence indicates that
this was at one point bridged by a land connection,
and some temple records suggest that the connection
was broken by violent storms in 1480. Cotton
suggested that the channel be dredged to enable
passage of ships, but nothing was done till
1828, when some rocks were blasted and removed
under the direction of Major Sim.
A more detailed marine survey of Ram Setu was
undertaken in 1837 by Lieutenants F. T. Powell,
Ethersey, Grieve and Christopher along with
draughtsman Felix Jones, and operations to dredge
the channel were recommenced the next year.
However these, and subsequent efforts in the
19th century, did not succeed in keeping the
passage navigable for any vessels except those
with a light draft.
(Courtesy: Wikipedia)
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