0 a structure that goes under water or under ground and keeps water out, used in building and repairing things such as bridges: --
1 in the past, a large box or a vehicle pulled by a horse, used for carrying ammunition (= bullets, etc.) needed for a battle --
The dead carried from the battlefield on a caisson were covered with a flag.
For officers of the rank of colonel or higher, a riderless horse follows the caisson to the gravesite.
There were caissons loaded with cartridges, musket balls and flints.
A caisson is the horse-drawn vehicle that once carried ammunition in battle and carries coffins afterward.
The Jefferson Memorial was built in the late 1930s and early 1940s atop pilings and caissons sunk into an artificial mud flat that is about 100 feet deep.
190,000 cubic yards of concrete went into the bridge's anchorages, caissons, towers and highway approaches.
The foundation work, which involves drilling 34 steel and concrete caissons, is expected to take a year.
Thousands of people worked on the Brooklyn Bridge. Many bodies are buried underneath those caissons.