2024
DOI: 10.1017/s0007087423000948
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‘The very term mensuration sounds engineer-like’: measurement and engineering authority in nineteenth-century river management

Rachel Dishington

Abstract: Measurement was vital to nineteenth-century engineering. Focusing on the work of the Stevenson engineering firm in Scotland, this paper explores the processes by which engineers made their measurements credible and explains how measurement, as both a product and a practice, informed engineering decisions and supported claims to engineering authority. By examining attempts made to quantify, measure and map dynamic river spaces, the paper analyses the relationship between engineering experience and judgement and… Show more

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