Assuming that somehow the illuminati found El Dorado.............and it exists under the famous waterfall............................why wouldn't they just take out the gold?? Well, someone would notice...........but if u build the world's biggest dam a little bit north..............all the attention is there..........and there are tons of trucks coming and going..........dumping earth..........concrete.........etc.............but u form tunnels from where are building the dam........under teh earth...........south.........to where the falls are.........kinda like in Shawshank Redemtion........Tim Robbins took that rock hammer............w/o anyone knowing...........and made his own tunnel............these old illuminati men are very patient................and u disguise the gold as earth..............they are digging..............the dam..............u just color the gold........black, red.......whatever to match the earth or concrete..............who is going to notice in all the coming and going?...............and the engineers have control over the general operation...............
Statistics[edit]
Central Control Room (CCR)
Construction[edit]
- The course of the seventh biggest river in the world was shifted, as were 50 million tons of earth and rock.
- The amount of concrete used to build the Itaipu Power Plant would be enough to build 210 football stadiums the size of the Estádio do Maracanã.
- The iron and steel used would allow for the construction of 380 Eiffel Towers.
- The volume of excavation of earth and rock in Itaipu is 8.5 times greater than that of the Channel Tunnel and the volume of concrete is 15 times greater.
- Around forty thousand people worked in the construction.[18]
- Itaipu is one of the most expensive objects ever built.
Generating station and dam[edit]
- The total length of the dam is 7,235 metres (23,737 ft). The crest elevation is 225 metres (738 ft). Itaipu is actually four dams joined together — from the far left, an earth fill dam, a rock fill dam, a concrete buttress main dam, and a concrete wing dam to the right.
- The spillway has a length of 483 metres (1,585 ft).
- The maximum flow of Itaipu's fourteen segmented spillways is 62.2 thousand cubic metres per second (2.20×106 cu ft/s), into three skislope formed canals. It is equivalent to 40 times the average flow of the nearby natural Iguaçu Falls.
- The flow of two generators (700 cubic metres per second (25,000 cu ft/s) each) is roughly equivalent to the average flow of the Iguaçu Falls (1,500 cubic metres per second (53,000 cu ft/s)).
- If Brazil were to use Thermal Power Generation to produce the electric power of Itaipu, 434,000 barrels (69,000 m3) of petroleum would have to be burned every day.[dubious – discuss]
- The dam is 196 metres (643 ft) high, equivalent to a 65-story building.[19]
- Though it is the seventh largest reservoir in size in Brazil, the Itaipu's reservoir has the best relation between electricity production and flooded area. For the 14,000 MW installed power, 1,350 square kilometres (520 sq mi) were flooded. The reservoirs for the hydroelectric power plants ofSobradinho Dam, Tucuruí Dam, Porto Primavera Dam, Balbina Dam, Serra da Mesa Dam and Furnas Dam are all larger than the one for Itaipu, but have a smaller installed generating capacity. The one with the largest hydroelectric production, Tucuruí, has an installed capacity of 8,000 MW, while flooding 2,430 km2 (938 sq mi) of land.
- Electricity is 55% cheaper when made by the Itaipu Dam than the other types of power plants in the area.
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