Levee
A levee is an elongated embankment built along a river, coastline, or other watercourse to prevent flooding of adjacent land. Levees can be natural, formed by sediment deposition during floods, or artificial, constructed as engineered earthworks.
Natural levees form when rivers overflow and deposit heavier sediments along the banks, creating raised banks
The primary purpose of a levee is to keep water out of inhabited or agriculturally valuable land,
Maintenance and risk are ongoing concerns. Levees require regular inspection, vegetation management, repair of erosion or
Historically, levees have been used for millennia, with prominent systems along the Nile and in delta regions.