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The Song saw an impressive development of iron and steel production
for agricultural tools, as well as for such new developments as
chains for suspension bridges and drill bits for the sinking of
wells with bamboo serving as natural pipe.
Meanwhile steel tips increased the effectiveness of Song arrows
also equipped with flame-throwers and "crouching tiger catapults"
for throwing bombs. Gun-powder was also used to good effect in mining.
The Chinese were also world leaders in ship-building including
water-tight compartments and stern-post rudders. They navigated
with the aid of (south-pointing) compasses, another Chinese invention.
This
site gives a step-by-step description, with images, of how the "Rainbow
Bridge" in the scroll (shown above right) might have been built.
Watery
Kingdom: China's Mariners from Antiquity to the Ming Dynasty [Vancouver
Maritime Museum] Part of a larger unit on China's maritime
history, this section on the Song Dynasty and Quanzhou includes
information on advances in shipbuilding during the Song Dynasty
and the significant 1974 excavation of a Song-dynasty ship near
Quanzhou.
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