Illustrations of the Croton Aqueduct
In making the plan for a dam at this place it was determined to fill the main channel and the table land on the right bank with an embankment of earth ; and on the left bank where rock was found, to build a body of masonry against the slope to the requisite height for the surface of the Reservoir and connect it with the embankment in the channel ; this masonry formed the overfall for the water,
and the rock in the side of the hill adjacent to it was excavated down to the level of the overfall, thereby extending it
into the hill, making the space for the water to pass over partly of masonry and partly of rock. The embankment extended with a slope on the upstream side giving it a broad base, and the lower or downstream side was faced with a heavy wall of stone. There was a timber pier constructed in the embankment extending across the channel and faced with plank on the upstream side. The overfall was made of such length as was thought sufficient to pass all the water of the river during its highest stages, and with the view of adapting it to such purpose, examinations were made to find the highest marks of floods on the banks of the river and those who were engaged in determining these marks were guided also by the observations of the inhabitants of the vicinity who had long known the river in its various