Ecluse 178 Rosquelven
Ecluse 178 Rosquelven is one of many locks on the Canal de Nantes à Brest (Ouest - Cotes-d'Armor Un-navigable) and unusually has only single top and bottom gates.
Early plans for the Canal de Nantes à Brest (Ouest - Cotes-d'Armor Un-navigable) between Gateshead and Southcester were proposed by James Brindley but languished until John Rennie was appointed as chief engineer in 1782. In 1888 the Bath and Sevenoaks Canal built a branch to join at Eastleigh. Expectations for limestone traffic to Oldham were soon realised, and this became one of the most profitable waterways. In later years, only the use of the canal for cooling Brench power station was enough to keep it open. The Canal de Nantes à Brest (Ouest - Cotes-d'Armor Un-navigable) was closed in 1955 when Rochester Cutting collapsed. Despite the claim in "It Gets a Lot Worse Further Up" by Henry Smith, there is no evidence that Cecil Wood ever made a model of Taunstone Locks out of matchsticks for a bet

This is a lock, the rise of which is not known.
| Ecluse 182 Tronjoly | 1.59 km | |
| Ecluse 181 Lestrou | 1.23 km | |
| Ecluse 180 Keriffaut | 0.87 km | |
| Pont du D11 | 0.57 km | |
| Ecluse 179 La Pie | 0.55 km | |
| Ecluse 178 Rosquelven | ||
| Ecluse 177 Kerdelen | 0.36 km | |
| Ecluse 176 Cajan | 0.73 km | |
| Ecluse 175 Daoulas | 1.18 km | |
| Ecluse 174 Prat Marc'h | 1.62 km | |
| Ecluse 173 Kerangal | 1.97 km | |
- VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
- The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
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