Leaning Tower of Pisa Secure For 300 More Years 168
Ponca City, We Love You writes "The tower of Pisa began to lean five years after its construction began, in 1178, and by 1990 it had tilted more than four meters off its true vertical. Conservationists estimated that the entire 14,500-ton structure would collapse 'some time between 2030 and 2040.' Now the Leaning Tower of Pisa has been stabilized and declared safe for at least another three centuries. The stabilization, which cost $30M, was accomplished by anchoring it to cables and lead counterweights, while 70 tons of soil were removed from the side away from the lean, and cement was injected into the ground to relieve the pressure. The tilt has now returned to where it was in the early 19th century. Nicholas Shrady, author of Tilt: A Skewed History of the Tower of Pisa, says that the tower was destined to lean from the outset because it was built on 'what is essentially a former bog.' Shrady adds that the tower previously came close to collapsing in 1838, 1934, and 1995. (The commission convened in 1990 to study the tower's stability was the 17th such.) Although Galileo Galilei is said to have dropped cannon balls from the tower in a gravity experiment, Shrady says the myth is the result of 'the overripe imagination of Galileo's secretary and first biographer, Vincenzo Viviani.'"
Please proofread summary just a little bit (Score:5, Funny)
It's a famous landmark! (Score:2)
Re:Please proofread summary just a little bit (Score:5, Funny)
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Oblig Simpsons quote. (Score:3, Funny)
Tower of Pis? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm usually leaning when I have a tower of piss.
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Re:Tower of Pis? (Score:5, Funny)
333333333
111111111
444444444
111111111
555555555
999999999
222222222
666666666
555555555
333333333
666666666666
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"Leaning Tower of Pizza (boxes)" looked just like that (sans numbers)!
Infeezible (Score:2)
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a3_341.html [straightdope.com]
They should have chosen a square number (Score:2)
Crap (Score:5, Funny)
You bastards.
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You bastards.
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Wow, just like Superman III! (Score:5, Funny)
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Safe for 300 years (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Safe for 300 years (Score:5, Insightful)
This ship is unsinkable!!
Anyone else seeing similarities?
Re:Safe for 300 years (Score:5, Funny)
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That's just wrong... (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:That's just wrong... (Score:5, Informative)
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I think about that.
I live about 9 blocks from the downtown Chicago and when I walk my dog, I like to gaze at the stunning Chicago skyline. I'm literally in the shadow of Sears Tower early in the morning, and sometimes it seems like some of the older buildings between the Tower and me look to be a tiny bit leaning.
It's probably just a trick of the perspective, but as a non-engineer (actually, the anti-engineer), I marvel
Re:That's just wrong... (Score:5, Funny)
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Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to be missing from your comment
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It's written in Pearl, you insensitive clod.
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The Monadnock building has sunk since it was built. http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM3Y2H [waymarking.com]
The Sears Tower does lean 6 inches to the west. Google around for the story, I remember it being told by a tour guide.
Stupid builders (Score:2)
So, it seems that those builders, besides not being able to choose a good place to begin with, were unable to extrapolate. Which part of "if this goes on" they couldn't understand?
If it were me, I would stop building when it started leaning, and do it over somewhere else. To reduce the cost, the stones could be reused, just take it apart and put it back together where the ground is more suitable.
Re:Stupid builders (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the way it's always worked, and the way it always will work.
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To me, the Leaning Tower of Pisa was a monument of how human mistakes live on for centuries, and it was a miracle it was still standing. Now they've gone and reinforced it and taken all the fun out of it. They might as well have straightened it... It was also funny to me how an utterly useless building (who'd want to work with gravity pulling you gently towards the open window?) is conserved simply because it's old. If the same thing had happened today, which it does on a regular basis, the building would have been torn down.
They do their best to keep it leaning, but not falling because that tower is what makes Pisa famous.
And while its true that its current state is manufacturered, this has been the case for a long time. It has been straighten before and it has been reinforced before, so this newest work changes nothing as its state before the latest work was already an artificial one.
Also, you are right, it is conserved because it is old. What do you think they could build in its place that would have more value than th
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To me, the Leaning Tower of Pisa was a monument of how human mistakes live on for centuries, and it was a miracle it was still standing. They might as well have straightened it.
I believe that a non-Leaning Tower of Pisa serves as a much worse reminder of human error than a leaning one. The fact that it's reinforced just to stay up keeps the lesson alive.
If the same thing had happened today, which it does on a regular basis, the building would have been torn down.
So in your opinion we should just tear down every building not in pristine condition? If the same thing happened today we'd tear it down so that we could do something profitable with the space (apartments, office building, etc) and as the AC already said:
tourism. It's arguably the most important source of income for Pisa
Re:That's just wrong... (Score:5, Insightful)
And the Tower is only useless if art and history and engineering education are useless. While its foundation of course is famously defective, consider this: the oldest parts of this structure are nine hundred years old; the newest parts are seven hundred years old. What the medieval world lacked in civil engineering, it had to make up out of a combination of trial and error, craft, and sheer daring. Because they did not have the civil engineering knowledge, any structure like this that they built might collapse at any time. It's remarkable people even undertook projects like this, which were the work of centuries, many, many short lived generations.
Yet even so, the tower has stood all this time, out of true. At the very least a fitting monument to the generations of craftsmen who built it so well.
In any case the Leaning Tower serves as the bell tower of the Cathedral of Pisa, so it is not literally "useless".
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Re:That's just wrong... (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because your overly functional mind sees no use for a building doesn't mean other people can't derive pleasure from it.
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2. it leans!
3. $$$
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Do you think it's an office building or what? It's a bell tower. As long as it doesn't fall it serves it purpose. What is funny is that there are many other leaning towers around, but for some reason the one in Pisa has become "The" leaning tower.
Re:That's just wrong... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Just get rid of the damn thing. There's lots of photos around if anyone in the future wants to see it anyway.
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Re:That's just wrong... (Score:5, Interesting)
If you're looking for useless buildings, you needn't go to Italy. Every country has them. From cathedrals to some person's birthplace to other monuments. Though, are they so useless? They serve, as mentioned above, tourist attractions, as some sort of spiritual focus and if nothing else as a reminder that earlier generations existed and did something spectacular as well. By your logic, the Pyramids would make a pretty nifty quarry.
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http://www.roadsideamerica.com/ [roadsideamerica.com]
qz
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Same goes for Venice.
Am I right?
You could've had a V-8 (Score:1)
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It costs around $30+US to climb the tower and see other other buildings and they are just not worth it.
Despair, Inc comes to mind... (Score:2)
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Heavens, do you ever get any fun at all in your life? Do you ever laugh? Is there ever anything that you find interesting, fascinating, or just plain beautiful, just for its own sake?
I do laugh. I laugh at the immortalised screwup that is the Leaning Tower. I laugh at Steve Ballmer's latest buzzword-laden, meaningless sentence. I laugh when a politician tries vainly to take a serious stance on an issue they know nothing about; doubly hard when they have a financial interest in that issue. Anyway, it's useless perusing a phonebook for spelling errors. People spell their surnames all kinds of weird ways :P.
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Admittedly, given most countries dismal performance at the test, there's not much of a difference with the tower...
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Tower of Pies! Delicious! (Score:2, Funny)
Tower Of Pies [herbivoracious.com]
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Did anyone actually try to take a bite out of that tower?
Well, there's a downside to all this (Score:5, Funny)
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Another 300 years of crafting more Leaning Tower Of Pisa jokes.
OB Monty Python (Score:1)
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Doesn't matter, fact or not its a useful teaching mechanism. Plus of course the recipient of that knowledge then learns the truth later, which has the effect of reinforcing the basics facts which the original example was used to teach.
Anyway, its a fun story, who cares if its not true? There are so many things for which we don't know the events that discovered them, and people do love a story.
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The Wikipedia entry on The Tower of Pisa is a good example of why Wikipedia is troublesome. It's a got a lot of speculation on it that's unreferenced -- and were it referenced, it's sill supposition in many cases. The English is awful too. And yet... there's no way of fixing it, because it's locked off by a cabal of admins. Yep, who needs terrorists
Re:OB Monty Python (Score:5, Funny)
yar....why ye be posting as AC?
you should be proud to attach your name to a post declaring your belief that the great pasta in the sky created all life
RAmen
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Both the Bible, and the Macro Evolution Theory, have not been proven.
So... Neither can be considered a fact.
sometimes you gotta feed em (Score:1)
Perhaps you meant to say that neither can be known as fact.
Then again perhaps not. I doubt you meant to say that at all. Writing accurately would belie your selfish agenda; that is, attempting to compare the culmination of human discernment and human logic that is modern science to the culmination of human creativity that is religion.
Trying to
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Let the battle begin...
qz
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People just aren't sure exactly how it happens.
And it's not like the Bible has the only other existing creation story. Why not pick one that wasn't plagiarized from the Summerians? Why not make some statement like "the Norse creation story hasn't been proven true"?
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Hmm. (Score:5, Informative)
Very off topic... Moderator points. (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to get 5 moderator points, then a while ago, I had 10, now I have 15... Does anyone have any clue what on earth is going on? Do they stack over time if unused?
And to stay slightly on-topic: I find it hilarious that they're fixing old engineering mistakes using modern engineering principles that are technically over 3000 years old
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Re:Very off topic... Moderator points. (Score:4, Funny)
On-topic, the Tower Of Pisa is like Windows -- throw more money at the problem, but never fix it, and people will actually enjoy the defects. Marketing over engineering wins again!
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It's actually tough to use all 15 now, since I won't moderate in stories that I wouldn't have been interested to read in the first place.
The story of why the leaning tower of pisa was.... (Score:1, Funny)
There was a baker who had become rather popular with his breads, sandwiches and soups. He experimented with new and wonderful, and sometimes not so wonderful meal idea. By accident one day a shelf bracket in his kitchen gave way and though nothing had gotten broken various item spilled onto the counter where he was making various products. In cleaning up the mess he scoped meats and chesses and sauces onto a flatten, by the shelf, bread dough. Being the experimental type and not wanting to waste hi
Re:The story of why the leaning tower of pisa was. (Score:2)
70 tons? (Score:1, Troll)
You've got 11,000+ tons of tower with a looong lever arm. Doing anything with under 1% of that mass at the base does not sound too effective.
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70 tons of soil is something like 70 cubic meters of soil(on the low end, that's at density of 2g/cc and assuming ton means 1000 kg (where it either should mean either 900 or 2000, I didn't read the article)), which is 'only' a pad that is 12 meters by 12 meters by 0.5 meters. If you go with 0.25 meters,
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Great work (Score:2)
Stabilising an ancient tower in a still leaning position is pretty impressive.
Geeks' leaning tower (Score:2)
The degree of lean (Score:4, Informative)
According to Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], they moved it about 45 cm, meaning 45 cm is the difference between toppling in the next few decades vs the next few centuries.
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The 45cm that the moved the tower is probably almost completely unrelated to how long the tower will stand. What they likely altered was the rate at which the tower was moving.
old news (Score:2)
Blogographer? (Score:2)
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I guess it's better than "insightful".
Re:Aye, the Europeans be fit (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Gal Civ 2 perchance?! (Score:4, Funny)
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The end goal is more quality content (subjective), but plenty of individual unfairness happens too (also subjective).
If you fall into the demographic that enjoys slashdot, keep posting and pretend karma d
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