Monday, February 13, 2012

How would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?

I obviously can't just drive a big *** truck in there and start mixing the concrete on site, so what's a better way of doing it without having to cut any trees down to causing a big environmental problem?How would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?make it out of wood. (fallen wood).



.How would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?
you have a helicopter fly in the mix and waterHow would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?Buy it from the logging companies next door who are paving the rain forest to put up walmarts and Mc. Donnalds.How would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?
if you have local supplies of water, fuel [natural gas, coal], shake/gravel, clay and limestone you can make it on site. But that causes a CO2 emission that I suppose is a sunk cost if your project needs to have concrete.



maybe that's the point of the other answers here

How would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?Carry a large wallet.



They have been transporting materials since before the pyramids. Hire enough people to carry it one sack at a time. Manpower substitutes for machines.



It's not an engineering problem. It comes down to how much money you budget. If you have enough, use helicopters.How would I get concrete to a remote location say a rain forest to make a pathway for people to walk on?
You would use a concrete pump and then you could pump the concrete anywhere without causing any damage to the forest

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