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Encyclopedia > Leat

A leat (occasionally and archaically spelt lete) is a name, particularly common in the south-west of England for a man-made watercourse, or a makeshift aqueduct. Also it is a birth given name.


The most famous examples are Drake's Leat, constructed on the instructions of Sir Francis Drake to conduct water from Dartmoor to Plymouth, and the Devonport Leat constructed in the late 18th century to carry water to the explanding naval dockyard at Devonport, now a part of Plymouth.


According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word is cognate with let in the sense of "allow to pass" (as in "passing water").


  Results from FactBites:
 
Sojourn in Africa (1549 words)
In one case, LEAT represented 3,000 villagers of the Rufiji River Delta area against a multinational corporation and the government planning to build a fish-prawning farm.
LEAT argued that the proposed project would destroy the largest mangrove forest in Eastern Africa, wipe out all marine aquatic life, and deplete natural resources - altering the lives and livelihood of over 3,000 villagers.
LEAT members saw this as an essential tool to help them define their future role and unite the forces of the Eastern African countries to combat problems of environmental injustice, abuse of human rights, and destruction of natural resources.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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