41. A wet ditch with current, or one in which the water level may be varied by the defence, presents greater difficulties. The method of crossing which seems most promising is by a causeway made of materials which will allow the water to pass freely through it. For this purpose it is usually recommended to use casks with their heads knocked out, or strong gabions lashed to balks, so as to form continuous tubes, which are loaded with stones and sunk with their axes parallel to the counter-scarp by sappers working under cover of a shield. When the top of the causeway is about a foot above the high-water mark it is levelled off with fascines and the approach driven forward as previously described. When available, iron or terra-cotta pipes of large diameter may, perhaps, be advantageously substituted for casks or gabions. Cormontaigne, at Philipsburg, in 1734, successfully used floating bridges of fascines with parapets of gabions and fascines covered with raw hides. Two bridges were made. They were 128 feet long, 48 feet wide, and 6 feet thick. The water was about 15 feet deep. To construct and hold in place, in a strong or varying current, a floating bridge of sufficient width and depth to support, without sinking or capsizing, the parapets necessary for protection against modern small arms and machine guns is a task presenting such great difficulties that it will hardly be undertaken, except as a last resort, and then with a very uncertain issue.
When, however, the fire of the work is nearly or entirely silenced, a floating bridge of pontoons, casks, spars, or other materials, with a slightly masked roadway, may furnish a sufficiently good crossing and may be constructed with little difficulty and loss.[1]
CHAPTER IV.
BATTERIES, OBSERVATORIES, AND MAGAZINES.
42. Batteries in siege operations are for field-guns, siege-guns, howitzers, and mortars.
When the gun-platform is on or above the level of the ground they are known as “elevated batteries,” when it is below the surface as “sunken batteries.”
When they are concealed from the view of the enemy by natural or artificial screens they are called “screened” or “masked batteries,” and when on sites which can be seen by the enemy “exposed batteries.”
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS OF SIEGE BATTERIES.
43. 1st. A good platform for and sufficient space to work each gun. The platform must be suited to the gun used. The space required is about 15 feet front by 20 to 25 feet depth.
2d. A parapet which cannot be penetrated by the projectiles which will be fired against it, and which is high enough to afford cover to the gun and its detachment against curved fire. A thickness of 30 feet of earth will usually be enough for the most exposed batteries. A less thickness may be used when the conditions justify it. The height of the interior crest above the terre-plein should not be less than 7½ feet when this is attainable and may sometimes be greater.