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词条 Fens Waterways Link
释义

  1. New Cuts

     Precursors 

  2. Gallery

  3. See also

  4. References

     Bibliography 

  5. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2017}}{{Use British English|date=December 2016}}

A separate, complementary waterway is the Bedford and Milton Keynes Waterway, opening up a route for broader beam boats between The Fens and the rest of Britain's canal network.

New Cuts

The Environment Agency has obtained a "significant proportion" of the £8m required for phase one. Starting from the north, the first development was the provision of a new tidal lock from the Haven in Boston to the South Forty-Foot Drain at the Black Sluice, opened to traffic on 20 March 2009.[2] Funding for phase two of the project, which will involve widening of the South Forty-Foot Drain from Donington to a new road crossing under the A151 road, a new lock and a junction with the River Glen, a tributary of the River Welland, at Guthram Gowt has been secured from the East Midlands Development Agency.[3]

To connect the Glen to the Welland requires a new tidal lock at the Surfleet Sluices and reconstruction of the tidal Fulney Lock in the River Welland, leading to Spalding.

Another major innovation will be a new cut between the Welland, probably at Peakirk and the River Nene downstream of Peterborough, costing at least £20m and probably using the Folly River and part of either Car Dyke or Cat's Water Drain, entering the Nene near Flag Fen. From here the link will follow the existing Middle Levels through Whittlesey Dyke, King's Dyke and Vermuyden's Drain (Forty Foot Drain) to Chatteris. To avoid the existing troublesome crossing from Salter's Lode to Denver Lock a new lock would probably be provided from Vermuyden's Drain into the Old Bedford River at Welches Dam, and thence to the Great Ouse at Earith, though another possibility is to use Fenton's Lode to avoid most of the tidal section.[4]

The completion of the project would be the long-discussed Bedford and Milton Keynes Waterway canal between Bedford and Milton Keynes following the course of the Great Ouse and joining the Grand Union Canal, mooted as the "first new canal in over a century". The funding for this is slowly appearing and as well as providing for the first time an inland route for broader boats—up to {{convert|3.2|m|ftin}} wide—between the north and south of England, it would also serve as a flood relief channel for new developments in the areas through which it is to pass through. This extra benefit may release funding from wider sources.[5] Adaptation of existing locks and bridges would be necessary to increase the dimensions to Grand Union Canal gauge, both in width and air draft.

Precursors

Although using a slightly different route, there are echoes of plans made in 1809 to link the waterways. Two schemes were proposed, one which would have created a canal from Stamford to the Oakham Canal, {{convert|11|mi|km}} due west, with a link from Stamford to the Nene at Peterborough, and a connection from near Market Deeping on the Welland, and a rival scheme to link Stamford to the Grand Junction Canal, both of which included a connection to the South Forty-Foot Drain. Both were put before Parliament in 1811, but neither met with any success. The idea was raised again in 1815 and 1828, but no further action was taken.[6]

Gallery

See also

{{Portal|UK Waterways}}
  • Canals of the United Kingdom
  • History of the British canal system

References

1. ^{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/lincolnshire/4699103.stm|title=Project is 'answer to the Broads'|last=Staff|date=20 July 2005|publisher=BBC News|accessdate=31 July 2008}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.bostonstandard.co.uk/news/local/video_michaela_strachan_opens_new_boston_lock_1_1115110|title=Michaela Strachan opens new Boston lock|publisher=Boston ECHO|accessdate=23 December 2010}}
3. ^Lincolnshire Waterways Partnership, Newsletter, March 2008
4. ^{{cite web |title=Fens Waterways Link Supporting Report 3: Engineering |publisher=Environment Agency |date=2004 |url=http://www.fenswaterways.com/portals/0/docs/engineering_report.pdf |accessdate=6 February 2008 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110710234756/http://www.fenswaterways.com/portals/0/docs/engineering_report.pdf |archivedate=10 July 2011 |df=dmy }}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://iwa.jamkit.com/Restoration/UsefulInformation/TechnicalDocuments/TechnicalRestorationHandbook/main_content/watermanagementoniw.pdf |title=Water Management on Inland Waterways |last=Sutton |first=Roy |date=December 2004 |work=Technical Restoration Handbook |publisher=Inland Waterways Association |page=4 |accessdate=23 December 2010 }}{{dead link|date=December 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
6. ^Hadfield (1970), p.97

Bibliography

{{Refbegin}}
  • {{cite web

|last = Adams
|first = John
|authorlink =
|coauthors =
|title = Fens Waterways Link
|work =
|publisher = Environment Agency
|date =
|url = http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/recreation/boating/38205.aspx
|format =
|doi =
|accessdate = 13 December 2008
|deadurl = yes
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20100831053213/http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/recreation/boating/38205.aspx
|archivedate = 31 August 2010
|df = dmy
}}
  • {{Cite book

|author=Charles Hadfield
|title=The Canals of the East Midlands
|publisher=David and Charles
|year=1970
|isbn=0-7153-4871-X}}{{Refend}}

External links

  • Fens Waterways Link website
  • The Easterling, June 2009 Journal of the East Anglian waterways association, describing the re-opening of the Black Sluice lock and giving a detailed history of the waterway.

4 : Canals in England|Rivers of Cambridgeshire|Rivers of Lincolnshire|Canals in Lincolnshire

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