How is the wood Venice is built on not decomposing over time?

543 views

(Not sure about the flair.. sorry)
Wooden beams in earth (like with fences) rot over the years and break.
I was under the impression that this was because of water.
Shouldn’t Venice “sink” because of rotten beams?

In: Earth Science

15 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Medieval Copenhagen was also build on wooden beams.
The land Copenhagen is build on, is mostly wetlands, though almost all of it is now drained.
When old foundations are removed, you can get these ancient wooden beams out of the ground, that have these beautiful dark veins from being submerged for ages. They used to be sold to woodworkers for furniture material, but AFAIK since it happens so rarely, they are given to the archaeologists of the national museum.
Sunken logs do go for a rather high price, than normal timber, due to their special look.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s like when archeologist’s find an old wooden boat that’s been buried in a wet environment. They need to to keep it wet untill it’s treated to stop it from decaying .

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’ll add to other comments but… it depends on the water temp and what is in it. Old ships that are pulled up in some places have no wood left, others have a full hull. Most treasure wrecks in warmer water get wrecked by worms and parasites. Some in the same areas get covered deep in sandbars are just fine.

There have been wrecks pulled up in the Med that are in tact, other are gone except the fasteners. Unlike metal (air is the enemy) wood has many different issues. If the wood is in hypoxic areas that are cold they will last forever.

Anonymous 0 Comments

As others have mentioned, the wood rots because of the exposure to oxygen. The repeated wetting and drying of the material also causes the material to degrade at a much quicker rate. Here is a video from the channel “Battleship New Jersey” explaining the process and how it relates to warships.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Wood doesn’t rot when submerged, wet wood will but if it’s constantly underwater the rotting microbes can’t survive.