You can make it with alot of things, be creative! You could use Styrofoam, you could use wood, or simple household items! Sugar cubes stick together great when fluff is used as the cement, you could make it out of that! It's up to you!
You can find kits of a Roman Aqueduct in many teacher supply stores, or Hobby stores. I believe Dover Publications also makes one.
If you want to design your own, there are many online sites that show drawings you can use as models. I would also suggest you use the image feature on your search box to find more views.
1. Buy sugar cubes
2. Lick the sugar cubes
3. Stick them together in the shape of an aqueduct
Styrofoam.
The technology that went into the first helicopters was nothing special. It just took special skills to design the controls for the main rotor blades. I'm familiar with the invention of the first Bell helicopter that was begun in 1943. Arthur Young designed a model helicopter that he could fly by remote control. Since radio was new, his model had a long electrical cable that was attached to a "trapeze" under the model that transmitted the inputs. Arthur Young lead a team of engineers to design a full-scale flying prototype. One of the problems they had in the construction was the transmission. The transmission required a gear reduction of 1:47, as I recall. The engineers couldn't do it. So they disassembled Young's model and drew up the pieces to full scale to make the planetary gear transmission that drove the main rotor. After that, all it took was a lot of testing and adjusting the controls to make make the rotor stable but flyable. They added a stabilizer bar that helped keep the rotor tracking smoothly---which was still in the design of the Bell Model 47.
Varies from make to make, model to model. You need to check with the company that made yours.
Catharine Beecher
Potentially they can make fault lines unstable (since that is pretty much where rivers run), and bring about catastrophic earthquakes.
by hands
Use glue and sugar cubes.
the pol that make it s tand
Make your tree in between scales but not the same size as any scale.
A scale model of a Roman aqueduct will have water flowing from a higher source into a series of channels. An easy way to accomplish this would be to stack different size plastic bowls, with the smallest at the top. Each bowl will have a small hole in the bottom for drainage. The bottom bowl could be sitting on a piece of sod with ditches cut into it.
I doubt that you can make a model of an empire. If anything, you can make a map of an empire.
just make it out of paper
first take a huge print of the lotus temple then get a cardboard box and stick the printings on it. Next use a black pen to outline the printing and cut the Bord out and........BINGO here is your model.
If you are referring to making a model Roman aqueduct, you can find websites which tell you.
first take a huge print of the lotus temple then get a cardboard box and stick the printings on it. Next use a black pen to outline the printing and cut the Bord out and........BINGO here is your model.
clay, chisel, fork (for fur), toothpick.
A mathematical model A structural model A scale model A working model A prototype model A make (e.g. a Lincoln convertible or a model T Ford) of car. A catwalk model (e.g. Twiggy)
You can do this by following some of the guidelines. There are many suggestions available online that can get you started.