Thursday, February 22, 2018

More About Incas

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What makes the Inca Empire so fascinating to archaeologists and

historians is that they specialized in achieving the impossible.

They conquered a huge empire without the use of wheeled vehicles

or horses to pull them. They had no system of writing but managed

somehow to maintain administrative control of far-flung provinces

thousands of miles from their capital. Without survey instruments, blueprints, photographs, and

machines for construction, they were still able to produce magnificent mountainside terraces,

highways, bridges, cities, towns, temples, and royal estates. Many of their projects were built in

seemingly impossible places, including sheer cliffs, steep mountain peaks, and raging rivers.

And they did this in a remarkably short time of less than 100 years.

Scholars see the Incas as a people who adopted a very successful, alternative approach to some

of civilization’s greatest challenges. They offer proof that engineering and social skills can be

independently developed in an isolated and challenging environment. Exciting new information

about the Incas appears every year as scholars publish their research.