Greece temporarily shut Corinth Canal for marine traffic on Monday, February 26, after intense storms and bad weather caused a rockfall in the area.
The Corinth Canal cuts through the narrow Isthmus of Corinth and separates Peloponnese from the Greek mainland. According to a statement made by the Canal's operating company, the landslide occurred at 04:00 p.m. on Monday, on the Peloponnese side of the Canal.
Video footage from the area shows large rocks to have broken off and dropped into the waterway along with mud, making marine traffic impossible. According to the Greek Shipping Ministry, the Canal will remain closed for about 15 days, temporarily blocking a transit route used mainly by commercial ships and pleasure yachts. Ships will now have to sail around the southern and western Peloponnese.
The 6.4-km canal serves about 11,000 ships a year, offering a short transit from southern Italy to the Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea, saving mariners a 700-km journey around the Peloponnese Peninsula.
The Panama Canal began to fill with water in the second part of the canal. The Panama Canal began...
On Sunday, June 26th, a Chinese freighter became the first ship to pass through the recently complet...
At the beginning of 2014, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) and the consortium responsible for buildi...
The Bridgewater Canal in Cheshire, a marvel of 18th-century engineering, recently faced a dramatic...
A major geotechnical incident unfolded in the early hours of Monday morning along the Llangollen Ca...
Intense rainfalls have provoked severe landslides and rockfalls in south Peloponnese and particularl...
Last week, archaeologists made a discovery at the Temple of the Inscriptions in the Mayan ruins of P...
The repair works to rebuilt the disintegrated Whaley bridge dam located at Toddbrook Reservoir, Der...
The recovery programme for the Bridgewater Canal embankment breach at Little Bollington has moved i...