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!!! THE TAJ IS SINKING !!!
The architect of the Taj Mahal aimed at giving maximum
strength and stability to the tomb and worked out the minutest details
with utmost precision : the weight of the entire structure is uniformly
distributed, extraordinarily massive piers and
vaults were constructed to support this heavy load., the very best
quality of bonding material helped combat the disrupted tensile
stress etc. However, in spite of all these precautions and care,
dangerous cracks and leakages developed in the substructure just
four years after its completion. Aurangzeb in his letter
to Shah Jehan in 1652 mentions these cracks. Some defects ere
discovered about the same time in the dome. Though thorough repairs
were undertaken, the nature of the cracks was not discovered. The
cracks were again noticed to have developed to dangerous proportions
in 1810. As a result an Advisory Committee on the restoration and
conservation of the monument was set up and a survey with reference
to the damage was undertaken.
Some very important facts resulted from this survey. It was discovered
that the plinth of the mausoleum on the northern side (or the riverside)
is lower than on the south by 3.5cms. Cracks were not noticed
on the exterior wall, but they were definitely present on the second
storey vaults of the marble structure and, on a much larger scale,
in the underground vaults below the northern side. The
long series of cracks in the underground vaults may be due to the
crushing of lime on account of the excessive weight, or as seems
more probable, this may be due to the sinking of the whole structure
towards the riverside!! Such a sinking would shift the load
out of balance slowly and gradually and the unequal settlement would
crack the weak points, particularly the soffits of the vaults and
arches, which is actually happening in the underground chambers.
A structure which stands on the edge of water has a natural tendency
to move towards the more open side, the higher edge always acting
as a strong buttress, thrusting it in the opposite direction. It
is the whole mass, and not a part of it, that is gradually sinking.
This is what can justifiably be concluded from the available data.

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