That's one possibility.
It occurs to me that people may be envisioning works on the scale of the Welland or Panama canals - for either of which pumping would indeed be totally impractical even with our current tech - when all it takes to close navigation is a 3-foot shelf of rock in the river bed. Many of the locks could well have lifts of less that 5'. The amount of water involved in cases like this isn't huge.
This is also a system that would lend itself to the installation of lift locks, which actually use only a couple of tons of water for every transit, for the higher steps, although there's nothing in the text to indicate that they are in use. The water requirements for those could easily be met by pumps powered by a water wheel.
PS: my apologies - I notice that I didn't finish the sentence about seasonal traffic patterns in the system, which must have been rather confusing. I was trying to say that if the ponds are available, you can take 6 months to pump the water for 6 weeks of intensive use. Again, the flow rate of the pump is much less than the rate through the lock.
lyonheart wrote:Hi Louis R,
Thanks for the very good points.
If the pumps primed low pressure siphons, possibly using water as a seal, so the pressure was less than the lower water level, water would be returned to the upper level until the pressure in the pump or siphon equalized or was released.
Louis R wrote:You are probably both overestimating the traffic on some canals and underestimating the efficiency of Safehold waterworks and their motive sources. The biggest issue in any canal system is the upstream water supply - too much, BTW, can be as serious as too little - and even partial reuse of the water run through the locks can make an enormous difference. The pumping station needn't have the capacity to operate the locks in real time, it only has to be able to move water uphill as fast as it runs down over the length of a day, say, or even, with enough storage upstream and highly seasonal traffic patterns [which we know to be the case on many of these systems]. In the places where pumps are actually needed, flows of tens of gallons per minute will often do the job - and I know no reason to think that Safehold equipment can't meet or exceed that easily. This is not Predynastic Egypt we're talking about, after all.