THE TYPE OF THE PANAMA CANAL
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Culebra cut at about 170 feet above the water surface—thence to the natural surface with a rise of one foot in two.
In the course of its deliberations the hoard of engineers passed favorably upon the feasibility of a canal of either the lock or sea-level type. It determined that a lock canal with summit level at 60 feet should be the basis of comparison of the lock with the sea-level type. It reached the conclusion that about 10 to 11 years should be the time assumed to be necessary for the construction of a lock canal, with summit level at 60 feet, and about 12 to 13 years for the construction of a sea-level canal.
The quantity of material of all kinds to be excavated in constructing a sea-level canal was estimated at 231,026,000 cubic yards, and the estimated cost of making the excavation was $183,136,000.
Among the important considerations bearing upon the selection of the best canal type the board of consulting engineers, as noted in the majority report, says:
