An 8 - foot deep, 15 -
foot wide channel roughly 260 yards long was opened up around midnight.
Not exact matches
Construction began in 1975, when workers carved a 1.3 - mile - long, 300 -
foot - deep, 490 -
foot -
wide diversion
channel to re-route the ParanĂ¡ River to make way for the dam.
The result is a narrow lake 410 miles (660 kilometers) long — 60 miles (97 kilometers) longer than Lake Superior — and 3,600
feet (1,100 meters)
wide, twice the width of the natural river
channel.
A
channel, 40
feet wide, flowed between the rocks, and the water stormed through this opening as if it were racing down a chute.
To better accommodate their trading, it is believed that the Mayans dug a narrow
channel, less than a mile long and no
wider than a few
feet, at the northern most tip of the Caye.
Actually, it is not so little, the reserve centers on a
channel (or cut) through the reef measuring just over than 25 yards / 23 meters
wide and 30
feet — 9 meters deep
This is a naturally occurring
channel, about 25 yards
wide and 30
feet deep, which was always highly utilized as a means of getting in and out of the reef area.
Between these two main islands is a 200 m
wide channel which can be crossed by
foot at low tide.