Examples
earth shelter
Earth shelters have been used for thousands of years to build energy-efficient homes.[52] At one extreme, an earth house is completely underground, perhaps with an open courtyard to provide air and light. An earthen shelter may be situated on a hillside, with windows or doors on one or more sides, or the building may be at ground level, but with earth piled against the walls and perhaps with an earthen roof.[53]
The pit houses built by Hohokam farmers between AD 100 and 900. C., in what is now the southwestern United States, were bermed structures, partially embedded in south-facing slopes. Its successful design was used for hundreds of years.[54] In Matmata (Tunisia), most ancient houses were built 12 meters (39 ft) below ground level and surrounded courtyards of about 12 meters (39 ft) square.[55][note 7] The houses were accessed through tunnels. Other examples of subterranean, semi-subterranean, or cliff dwellings, in both hot and cold climates, are found in Turkey, northern China, and the Himalayas and southwestern United States.[55] Various Buddhist monasteries built of earth and other materials on the sides of cliffs or caves in Himalayan areas such as Tibet, Bhutan, Nepal, and northern India are often found in dangerous locations. Since the 1970s, interest in this technique has resurfaced in developed countries.[52] By setting an earthen house on the ground, the house will be cooler in the warm season and warmer in the cold season.[53].
Native American Ground Cabin
An earthen hut") is a circular building built by some of the Native Americans of North America. They are dome-shaped and constructed of wooden posts and beams. Exterior transverse beams and then planks or split beams formed the inclined or vertical side walls.[58] The structure was covered with sticks and brush or grass, in turn covered by a thick layer of earth or sod. Some groups plastered the entire structure with mud, which when dried formed a shell.[58]
Bahareque
Bahareque is an ancient construction technique in which vines or smaller sticks are woven between vertical posts and then the wall is covered with mud mixed with straw and grass.[59] This technique is found throughout the world, from the Nile Delta to Japan, where bamboo was used to make bahareque.[60] In Cahokia, now in Illinois (United States), bahareque houses were built with the soil at a depth of between 0.30 and 0.91 meters below the ground. A variant of this technique is called bajareque in Colombia.[59] In prehistoric Britain, simple circular shelters of bahareque were built wherever sufficient clay was available.[61] Bahareque is still found as a panel in timber-framed buildings.[62] In general, the walls are non-structural and, in interior use, the technique was replaced in the developed world by lath and plaster and, later, by plasterboard.[60].
Sod house on the meadow
Pioneer European farmers on the North American prairies, where there was no wood for construction, often built their first home in a cave dug into the side of a hill or ravine, with a cover over the entrance. When they had time, they built a sod house. The farmer used a plow to cut the grass into 1 by 2 foot (0.30 by 0.61 meter) bricks, which were then stacked to form the walls.[63] The strips of sod were stacked grass side down, staggered in the same manner as masonry, in three rows side by side, resulting in a wall more than 0.91 meters thick. The wall was built around the door and window frames and the corners were secured with rods nailed vertically. The roof was made of sticks or brush, covered with prairie grass, and sealed with a layer of sod.[64] Sod houses were durable and usually lasted for many years, but they were damp and dirty unless the interior walls were plastered.[63] The roofs often leaked and sometimes collapsed in storms.[64]
adobe buildings
There are countless examples of adobe or mud brick constructions around the world. The walled city of Shibam in Yemen, declared a World Heritage Site in 1982, is known for its ten-story unreinforced adobe buildings.[65] The Djinguereber Mosque in Timbuktu, Mali, was first built in the early 1900s. C. (1st century AD) with round adobe bricks and a mixture of stone and mud and was subsequently rebuilt several times, constantly increasing in size(62).[66] Further south in Mali, the Great Mosque of Djenné, a spectacular example of Sahelian adobe architecture, was built in 1907 on the design of an earlier Great Mosque, built on the same site in 1280. The adobe requires maintenance and the fundamentalist ruler Seku Amadu had allowed the previous mosque to collapse.[67].
The Big House ruins, now an Arizona national monument protected by a modern roof, are a massive four-story adobe structure built by the Hohokam between 1200 and 1450 AD. C.[68] The first European to record the great house was a Jesuit priest, Father Eusebio Kino, who visited the place in 1694. At that time it had been abandoned for a long time.[69] When a temporary roof was installed in 1903, the adobe building had been empty and unmaintained for hundreds of years(66).[70].
The Huaca de la Luna, in what is now northern Peru, is a large adobe temple built by the Moche people. The building went through a series of construction phases, eventually growing to a height of around 32 metres, with three main platforms, four plazas and many smaller rooms and enclosures. The walls were covered in striking multicolored murals and friezes; Those that can be seen today date from between 400 and 610 AD. C..[71].
Tulous
A Fujian tulou is a type of rural dwelling of the Hakka people in the mountainous areas of southeastern Fujian, China.[72] They were built primarily between the 13th and 20th centuries.[73] A tulou is a large, enclosed and fortified earthen building, rectangular or circular, with thick load-bearing walls of rammed earth between three and five stories high. A tulou can accommodate up to 80 families. Smaller interior buildings are usually surrounded by these huge peripheral walls, which may contain rooms, warehouses, wells, and living quarters. The structure resembles a small fortified city.[74] The walls are formed by compacting earth mixed with stone, bamboo, wood and other readily available materials and are up to 1.8 meters thick. The result is a building that is well lit, well ventilated, wind and earthquake proof, warm in winter and cool in summer.[74].
Tumuli and pyramids
Ziggurats were elevated temples built by the Sumerians between the end of the 4th millennium BC. C. and the II millennium BC. C., which rose in a series of terraces until reaching a height of 61 meters above ground level. The Ziggurat of Ur contained some three million bricks, none of them more than 15 inches (380 mm) in length, so its construction must have been an enormous project.[75] The largest ziggurat was in Babylon and is believed by some to be the Tower of Babel mentioned in the Bible. It was destroyed by Alexander the Great and only the foundations remain, but it was originally 91 meters high on a base of 200 square meters.[76] Sun-dried bricks were used for the interior and baked bricks for the cladding. The bricks were joined with clay or bitumen.[77].
Many pre-Columbian indigenous societies of ancient North America built large earthen pyramidal structures known as platform mounds. Among the largest and best-known of these structures is the Monk's Mound, at the site of Cahokia, in what became Illinois, completed around 1100 AD. C., whose base is larger than that of the Great Pyramid of Giza. Many of the mounds were built several times at periodic intervals and some became quite large. They are believed to have played a central role in the religious life of the mound-building peoples and documented uses include semi-public platforms for the chief's house, platforms for public temples, mortuary platforms, platforms for ossuaries, platforms for earthen hut lodges, platforms for residence platforms, platforms for plazas and rotundas, and platforms for dances.[78][79].
The Pyramid of the Sun of Teotihuacán (Mexico), 63 meters high, began to be built in the year 100 AD. C.. The stone structure contains two million tons of rammed earth.[26].
Earthworks
Earthworks "Earth works (archaeology)") are engineering works created by moving or processing quantities of unformed earth or rock. The material can be moved to another location and molded to the desired shape.[80] Dikes, embankments, and dams are types of earthworks. A dike, check dam or check dam is an elongated natural ridge or artificially constructed earthen wall that regulates the water level. It is usually made of land and runs parallel to the course of a river in its flood plain or along low coasts.[81].
Mechanically stabilized earth (MSE) retaining walls can be used for embankments.[82] Mechanically stabilized earth walls combine a concrete leveling pad, wall covering panels, coping, soil reinforcement and selected fill.[83] Various designs of wall covering panels can be used.[83] Once the leveling pad and the first row of panels are in place, the first layer of fill can be used.[83] of earth is placed behind the wall and compacted. The first set of reinforcements is then placed on top of the soil.[84] The reinforcements, which may be strips or grids of tensioned polymer or galvanized metal, are attached to the siding panels.[85] This process is repeated with successive layers of panels, soil, and reinforcements. In this way, the panels are tied to the earth embankment to form a stable structure with balanced stresses.[86].
Although construction using the basic principles of mechanically stabilized earth has a long history, it was developed in its current form in the 1960s. The reinforcing elements used can vary, but include steel and geosynthetics. The term MSE is commonly used in the US to distinguish it from "Reinforced Earth", the trade name of the Reinforced Earth Company, but elsewhere Reinforced Soil is the generally accepted term.[82] Construction with mechanically stabilized earth is relatively quick and cheap and although labor intensive, does not require high levels of skill. Therefore, it is suitable for both developing and developed countries.[87].
Forts and trenches
The land has been used to build fortifications for thousands of years, including fortresses and walls, often protected by ditches. Aerial photography in Europe has revealed traces of earthen fortifications from Roman times and later medieval times.[88] Offa's Dyke is a massive embankment that runs along the disputed border between England and Wales.[89]Little is known about the era or the builder, King Offa of Mercia**,** who died in 796 AD. C.[90] A primitive fortification of wood and earth could be later succeeded by a brick or stone structure in the same location.[91].
The trenches were used by the besieging forces to approach a fortification protected from projectiles. The sappers built "saps" or trenches, which zigzagged towards the attacked fortress. They piled up the excavated earth to form a protective wall or gabion. The combined depth of the trench and height of the gabion could be 2.4 to 3.0 meters (8 to 10 feet). Sometimes the sap was a tunnel dug several meters below the surface. The sappers were highly skilled and well paid due to the extreme danger of their work.[92].
In the American Civil War (1861-1865), trenches were used as defensive positions throughout the war, but played an increasingly important role in the campaigns of the last two years.[93] Military earthworks perhaps culminated in the vast network of trenches built during World War I (1914-1918), which extended from Switzerland to the North Sea in late 1914.[94] The two lines of trenches faced each other, manned by soldiers who lived in terrible conditions of cold, humidity and dirt.[95] Conditions were worse in the Allied trenches. The Germans were more willing to accept trenches as long-term positions and used concrete blocks to build safe shelters underground, often with electric lighting and heating.[96]
Loose material dams
A loose material dam is a huge artificial barrier against water. It is usually created by emplacement and compaction of a complex semi-plastic mound "Plasticity (solid mechanics)") of various compositions of soil, sand, clay and/or rock. It has a semi-permanent natural waterproof coating on its surface and a dense, waterproof core. This makes the dam impermeable to surface erosion or infiltration.[97] The force of the reservoir creates a downward thrust on the mass of the dam, greatly increasing the weight of the dam on its foundations. This added force effectively seals and waterproofs the underlying foundation of the dam, at the interface between the dam and its channel.[98] A dam of this type is composed of fragmented independent particles of material. Friction and the interaction of the particles bind them together into a stable mass instead of using a cementing substance.[99].
The Syncrude Tailings tailings dam, in Alberta (Canada), is a check dam approximately 18 kilometers long and between 40 and 88 meters high. In 2001 it was considered the largest earth structure in the world by volume of fill.[100].