We're told the bridge was sold to an American in 1968, and it was dismantled, transported, and reconstructed in Lake Havasu, Arizona. Everyone's free to believe fairy tales, but IMHO normally functioning adults should give it up. So does this one hold up?
No, it does not.
No "9/11 Pentagon"-level photographic analysis is needed, just use your favorite search engine and look up something like "london bridge arizona construction". But before you do, what do you expect to see? Probably pictures of a bridge at different levels of completion over a body of water, right?
Wrong. What you see is a complete bridge over a desert, with dirt piled up to the top of the arches. Well WTF, huh? What are we seeing?
This was a completely existing bridge that had been buried under the desert. Probably because of erosion, at some point it became impossible to hide it's existence. So they dreamed up a tale to tell you about how it got there.
If you look around you can actually see that the waters of Havasu were originally nowhere near where the bridge is located. So between the "shore" and the "island" they had to excavate all the dirt to create a waterway, and then construct a brand new roadway to the bridgehead.
The population of Lake Havasu City, even by 1990, was only 24,000, and was not centered near the "island". No one was living on a hill out in the desert and no "bridge" was needed.
I believe they invented the whole "Spring Break" phenomenon to blow smoke around this whole incident. Culturally, that may be the strangest thought of all.
I take it you're referring to a picture like this.
It certainly does raise questions.
Precisely.
"Hey boss, where should we pile all this dirt?"
"Not out in the desert. Under the bridge we just built, obviously. Clog it up entirely if you can find a way to. You know, you could be the boss too someday if you just try thinking sometimes, man."
Perhaps they re routed the whole river during construction? Driving piles would not have been an option to have dry sections to work. The sand under the bridge could have been to support the forms of the arches. Either way, that fucking bridge was not moved there it was built there.
Look at a map. There wasn't a "river" and there still is not. There was just a high spot of land across from another high area. They had to excavate very far down to connect Lake Havasu to itself around that high spot.
Piles are driven under the water all the time. Have you ever noticed the ocean being blocked off every time they want to build a pier? Me neither. There are no photos of what would have been a rather large coffer dam.
As far as your speculation about sand under the bridge to support the arches, you may want to look into something called "scaffolding". It's been in common use for quite some time and has many advantages over enormous piles of dirt.
As far was you assertion that that fucking bridge was built there, you apparently forgot to link any photos of a time when that fucking bridge was not there, or when that fucking bridge was only partially constructed. But obviously your claim alone carries fucking conclusive evidentiary weight.
I trust everyone reading this is appropriately impressed by the demonstration of your knowledge of topography, construction, and engineering. I know I am.
It was rebuilt/moved to be a tourist attraction, not because someone needed a bridge?
Because the story is just a big dumb joke, look at how they just sail right by that part on the wiki page:
They should have just said it was a "Brewster's Millions" thing where this guy had to blow money on the dumbest stuff imaginable. But no, they don't even have enough respect for anyone's intelligence to bother making up even the flimsiest of lies.
Lol why what is the motive? Been here plenty of times you can see it yourself with the original markings. Numbered brick by brick for reconstruction. A millionaire's pet project nothing more.
You did read what I wrote about fairy tales, didn't you? Thanks for illustrating the point for the group.
Mud flood?
That's precisely what I think. They had to invent the cover story for this evidence before anyone could start asking, "Hey, why is there a fancy stone bridge out in the desert next to a tiny agricultural town?" I'm pretty imaginative but I can't think up an excuse for that one.