diversion channel - translation to greek
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diversion channel - translation to greek

ARTIFICIAL CHANNEL ALLOWING FLOODWATERS TO PASS AROUND A POPULATED AREA
  • floodbanks]] to avoid a flood plain in the village
  • Weimar Roth]]

diversion channel      
κοίτη εκτροπής
κοίτη εκτροπής      
diversion channel
English Channel         
  • [[Automatic identification system]] display showing traffic in the Channel in 2006
  • The beach of Le Havre and a part of the rebuilt city
  • 150 mm Second World War German gun emplacement in Normandy
  • British radar facilities during the [[Battle of Britain]] 1940
  • Landing in England scene from the [[Bayeux Tapestry]], depicting ships coming in and horses landing
  • Map of the channel area with French nomenclature
  • The [[Spanish Armada]] off the English coast in 1588
  • Map of the English Channel
  • The Strait of Dover viewed from France, looking towards England. The [[white cliffs of Dover]] on the English coast are visible from France on a clear day.
  • German forces]] and the [[Organisation Todt]] constructed fortifications round the coasts of the Channel Islands, such as this observation tower at Les Landes, Jersey.
  • St Helier]] lies in the bay off [[Saint Helier]] and is accessible on foot at low tide.
  • French invasion plans]] in 1759
  • The [[Mont Saint-Michel]] is one of the most visited and recognisable landmarks on the English Channel.
  • Kelham's ''Dictionary of the Norman or Old French Language'' (1779), defining [[Law French]], a language historically used in English law courts
  • Old West Norse]], the orange area [[Old East Norse]], and the green area the other Germanic languages with which Old Norse still retained some mutual intelligibility.
  • [[Osborne House]], the summer retreat of [[Queen Victoria]] on the [[Isle of Wight]]. Starting from the late 18th century, settlements on and around the English Channel coastline in England grew rapidly into thriving [[seaside resort]]s, bolstered by their association with royalty and the middle and upper classes.
  • corsairs]].
  • Spinnaker (observation) Tower]], [[Portsmouth Harbour]]
  • Authie]] and the [[Canche]]
  • Europe during the [[Last Glacial Maximum]] ca. 20,000 years ago
ARM OF THE ATLANTIC OCEAN THAT SEPARATES SOUTHERN ENGLAND FROM NORTHERN FRANCE
EnglishChannel; English channel; The English Channel; British Sea; The Channel; Channel Swimming; Narrow seas; English Chanel; User:Aldrich Hanssen/Noticeboard; Anglo-French Pond; Dover Traffic Separation System; Mor Breizh; Mor Bretannek
n. μάγχη, θάλασσα της μάγχης

Definition

data channel
<communications> A channel (on a BRI or PRI line) used to carry control information, to set up connections on the associated bearer channels. The name wasn't too bad back when users were sending voice (not data) over the {bearer channels}, but in 1997 it's quite a misnomer. (1997-03-10)

Wikipedia

Flood bypass

A flood bypass is a region of land or a large man-made structure that is designed to convey excess flood waters from a river or stream in order to reduce the risk of flooding on the natural river or stream near a key point of interest, such as a city. Flood bypasses, sometimes called floodways, often have man-made diversion works, such as diversion weirs and spillways, at their head or point of origin. The main body of a flood bypass is often a natural flood plain. Many flood bypasses are designed to carry enough water such that combined flows down the original river or stream and flood bypass will not exceed the expected maximum flood flow of the river or stream.

Flood bypasses are typically used only during major floods and act in a similar nature to a detention basin. Since the area of a flood bypass is significantly larger than the cross-sectional area of the original river or stream channel from which water is diverted, the velocity of water in a flood bypass will be significantly lower than the velocity of the flood water in the original system. These low velocities often cause increased sediment deposition in the flood bypass, thus it is important to incorporate a maintenance program for the entire flood bypass system when it is not being actively used during a flood operation.

When not being used to convey water, flood bypasses are sometimes used for agricultural or environmental purposes. The land is often owned by a public authority and then rented to farmers or ranchers, who in turn plant crops or herd livestock that feed off the flood plain. Since the flood bypass is subjected to sedimentation during flood events, the land is often very productive and even a loss of crops due to flooding can sometimes be recovered due to the high yield of the land during the non-flood periods.

Examples of use of diversion channel
1. Troops also blasted away boulders in the diversion channel, Xinhua reported.
2. Authorities plan to drain lake water through a diversion channel as early as Thursday.
3. Water from the Thames was diverted down the Jubilee River, a diversion channel, to protect Maidenhead, Eton and Windsor.
4. Even with water flowing into the specially built diversion channel, engineers were uncertain about controlling the discharge of water, state media said.
5. To the west, London is protected by several flood defense measures including the Jubilee River, a 7–mile–long diversion channel.