sent from a phone

> On 26. Jun 2020, at 12:52, Paul Allen <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> A lot of the UK's sewer network is old.  Like a qanat, it channels water and
> has vertical shafts.  Little of that network, except some of the very first
> sewers in the UK, is of historical significance.


according to WP the London sewer system was developed from the late 19th 
century on. This is not “old” in a historic sense, looking at a city that has 
thousands of years of history. I don’t know about the rest of the country but I 
would suspect that it wasn’t ahead of London. Historic is of course relative, 
as is old. A 2 years old car is still quite new, 3 months old milk is quite old 
;-)
A car from the 1920ies could likely be considered historic in any state, even 
as a wrack. Any water supplying infrastructure that is older than 100-200 years 
is likely historic anywhere in the world. Show me some ruins that are older 
than a few hundred years and are not “historic” but “just old”. It depends on 
the thing.

All this becomes even more relative if you look at actual usage of the historic 
key in OpenStreetMap :
https://taginfo.openstreetmap.org/keys/historic#values

Cheers Martin 
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