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How Tajikistan Is Building the World's Tallest Dam to Control a Mountain River In the heart of the Pamir Mountains, Tajikistan is executing the most ambitious civil engineering project of the 21st century: The Rogun Dam. Standing at a staggering 335 meters, this embankment dam will be the tallest on Earth, designed to withstand extreme seismic activity and tame the ferocious Vakhsh River. In this 33-minute deep dive, QuitTech Process uncovers the technical secrets of the 700km tunnel networks, the massive 600MW turbines, and the 75-million cubic meter rockfill operation. In this video, you will discover: The geology of the Vakhsh River salt wedge and how engineers prevented a structural collapse. The mechanics of the massive Lovat Tunnel Boring Machines. How Tajikistan is using high-density rockfill to create a seismic-proof barrier. Join QuitTech Process as we uncover the secrets behind this engineering marvel. 2. Retention-Based Timestamps (33:00 Duration) Strategic breaks are placed every 4–6 minutes to reset the viewer's attention span. 00:00 | The Vertical Challenge: Tajikistan’s 335m Ambition 02:45 | Why the Vakhsh River is an Engineer's Nightmare 05:12 | QuitTech Process: The Rogun Dam Blueprint 08:30 | Diverting a Mountain: The Massive 7km Diversion Tunnels 12:15 | The Salt Wedge Crisis: Solving the Geological Flaw 15:40 | Mass Excavation: Moving 75 Million Cubic Meters of Rock 19:22 | Subterranean Powerhouse: Carving the World's Largest Turbine Hall 23:10 | High-Density Core: The Science of Impermeable Clay 27:45 | Seismic Resilience: Engineering for a 9.0 Magnitude Event 30:15 | Global Impact: Powering Central Asia 32:10 | The Future of Mass Construction & Conclusion