Groundwater as a military resource: development of Royal Engineers Boring Sections and British military hydrogeology in World War II

Author:

Rose Edward P. F.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, UK (e-mail: ted.rose@virgin.net)

Abstract

AbstractTo drill boreholes for water supply, the Royal Engineers raised ten ‘Boring Sections’ between September 1939 and May 1943, eight in the UK, two in Egypt. While supporting campaigns in World War II, two deployed briefly to France, seven served widely within the Middle East (one of these in Iraq and Iran and later Malta, the others mostly operating from Egypt), one deployed to Algeria/Tunisia, four to Sicily and/or Italy (one of these onward to Greece), two deployed to support the D-Day Allied landings in Normandy and the subsequent advance via Belgium to Germany, and three served long-term in the UK. Greatest use was by Middle East Command, which at its peak had about 35 officers, 750 men and 40 drilling rigs assigned to water supply, and whose boreholes attained a cumulative length of some 40 km. The British Army used geology to help guide emplacement of boreholes in all these regions. Innovations included groundwater prospect maps at scales of 1:50 000 and 1:250 000, to help planning for the Allied invasion of Normandy and the subsequent campaign in NW Europe. Geology also helped guide groundwater abstraction by Indian Engineers in the Far East, and British/South African troops in East Africa.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference68 articles.

1. Water supply in the Middle East campaigns. III. Collecting galleries along the Mediterranean coast of Egypt and Cyrenaica;Addison;Water and Water Engineering,1946

2. Anon (1922) Military Engineering Vol. VI: Water Supply (HMSO, London).

3. Anon (1936) Military Engineering Vol. VI: Water Supply. War Office Code 7489 (HMSO, London).

4. GEOLOGY, GEOLOGISTS AND THE WAR EFFORT

5. Anon (1945) Military Engineering Vol. VI: Water supply. Supplement No. 1. The location of underground water by geological and geophysical methods, War Office Code 7490 (HMSO, London).

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