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Jul 3, 2019 · The first indications of constructed roads date from about 4000 BC and consist of stone-paved streets at Ur in modern-day Iraq and timber roads preserved in a swamp in Glastonbury, England.
- Mary Bellis
Street paving has been found from the first human settlements around 4000 BC in cities of the Indus Valley Civilisation on the Indian subcontinent in modern-day Pakistan, such as Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Roads in the towns were straight and long, intersecting one another at right angles. Wheeled transport.
May 23, 2018 · The first paved roads in the world were in ancient Mesopotamia. They were made of large stones, unlike the concrete and asphalt roads we use today. As more time passed, people began to build more roads on routes that experienced lots of traffic.
May 16, 2013 · The earliest stone paved roads have been traced to about 4,000 B.C. in the Indian subcontinent and Mesopotamia. To help support the movement of legions throughout their empire, the Romans...
- Steve Abrams
- unknown@hearst.com
The first recorded use of asphalt as a road-building material in Babylon. The ancient Greeks were also familiar with asphalt. The word asphalt comes from the Greek “asphaltos,” meaning “secure.” The Romans used it to seal their baths, reservoirs and aqueducts. 1595 Europeans exploring the New World discovered natural deposits of asphalt.
Jun 30, 2023 · The oldest constructed roads discovered to date are in former Mesopotamia, now known as Iraq. These stone paved streets date back to about 4000 B.C. in the Mesopotamia cities of Ur and Babylon.
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John Macadam (born 1756) observed that most of the “paved” U.K. roads in early 1800s were composed of rounded gravel [Smiles, 1904]. He knew that angular aggregate over a well-compacted subgrade would perform substantially better.