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There are some very peculiar looking aqueducts in Greece, I'm wondering, what happened to them, because the official narrative looks to me a bit unsatisfactory. Are they really so old, who built them, when, and why not makes the dripping water similar looking aqueducts in other places?
"The Aqueduct of Loukous: In the Greek municipality of North Kynouria in Peloponnese, near the villa of Herodes Atticus, a wealthy Greek aristocrat and a Roman senator, stands an old aqueduct bridge crossing a small ravine. The aqueduct carries water from a spring located about one and half kilometer to the northwest. The water is rich in dissolved minerals, and over two thousand years of water dripping from the sides of the aqueduct have built up thick deposits that hang like stalactites in a limestone cave."



The other is here: it looks like more to be a bridge, than an aqueduct?


"The Aqueduct of Loukous: In the Greek municipality of North Kynouria in Peloponnese, near the villa of Herodes Atticus, a wealthy Greek aristocrat and a Roman senator, stands an old aqueduct bridge crossing a small ravine. The aqueduct carries water from a spring located about one and half kilometer to the northwest. The water is rich in dissolved minerals, and over two thousand years of water dripping from the sides of the aqueduct have built up thick deposits that hang like stalactites in a limestone cave."
- From here: The Aqueduct of Loukous



The other is here: it looks like more to be a bridge, than an aqueduct?



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