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The Shadoof or shaduf It consisted of a single pole with a bucket on rope at one and a counterweight such a stone or lump of clay at the other. The operator would dip the bucket into the water by pulling down on the rope. The filled bucket would be raised by gravity acting on he counterweight with no effort from the operator. The contents of the bucket would then be poured into an irrigation channel.
The ancient Egyptians usually used irrigation systems to transport water from rivers.They used a Shaduf - a bucket on a rope attached to a weighted pole which allows the bucket to be lowered into the river then raised and poured into irrigation channels.
Most Nile irrigation takes the form of "flood irrigation", this is still commonly used today and occurs when the river rises (annually) in flood.In ancient times they also used a counterbalanced device called a "shadouf" to raise water to irrigation trenches when the level of the river had dropped - again these are still in use in some rural areas along the Nile.A more common method employed today uses concrete irrigation canals with water lifting pumps; these pumps raise the water from the river surface and into the canal where it is then distributed by smaller canals.The height difference in the rivers surface (between the seasons) can vary as much as 12 to 18 meters.The Shadouf is a device used to raise water from one level to another and onto the fields. Operated by hand, this device has a pole one end of the pole is a bucket. on the other end is a counter weight. The peasant farmer or slave filled the bucket with water, then let go of the bucket. The weight on the other end would raise the bucket of water allowing the contents to be tipped onto the field. This process went on all day long, day after day during the growing seasonhi.The ancient Egyptian used a shaduf to get get water from the Nile to other farms for irrigation. The shaduf consisted of a long pole that was balanced on a wooden crossbeam. A counterweight was attached at one end and a leather bucket was fastened to the other end. The farmer would pull the rope and bucket down into the water. Once the leather bucket was full of water, he would let go of the rope and the counterweight would lift the bucket out of the water. The farmer would then tip the water out of the bucket into a nearby canal which would allow the water to travel to other farms.when the Nile river flooded its banks and covered the land.As the river water gradually drained away they left behind a layer of silt
Shadoof Hanyaki(Sha duf han yahc e) had created the shadoof to get water for his family safely and decided to build them along the nile to help out others too
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Irrigation A+
Irrigation
egyptians
A counterpoint lift called a shadoof - also called shaduf, dhenkli or a picottah.
A shadoof is used to get water from one level to another. It is usually used to raise water from a lower level to a higher one.
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It is called a shadoof.
Shadoof was used by the Egyptians as a type of irrigation to water dry patches that were near canals. The shadoof could fetch stored canal water and pour it to the required direction.
it helped ancient Egyptians get water easier, and faster.