Terrace Farms

DA261294-01D5-44B6-BDB0-EA02B991A312.jpeg

Dublin Core

Title

Terrace Farms

Subject

The Inca Empire

Description

The lands that the Inca called home were the mountain ranges of the Andes. The huge mountains that make up the range are only a part of the many challenges making an empire of the range would bring. Active volcanos are dotted throughout the mountain range, the winds of El Niño periodically batter the coast, and on top of those, the area is an earthquake hot zone (D’Altroy, 10). So suffice it to say, taking care of large populations in those conditions was a Herculean achievement. The primary reason for this success was Incan agriculture. Their productive terrace farms produced maize, potatoes, and even cotton (D’Altroy, 10). These terrace farms conserved water, could be built into mountain sides, and pretty much could not flood. To add to this, the Inca managed to learn how to freeze dry potatoes and meat (the Inca had jerky first). This advancement made it possible to provision a larger army, but perhaps even more consequential, provide reliable food duress times of bad harvests. The Inca’s skill with managing resources, especially terrace farmed food, is one of the greatest achievements they managed to accomplish over the course of their all to short history.

Creator

The Inca Empire, Doti

Source

https://www.nationalgeographic.org/article/lofty-ambitions-inca/

Publisher

National Geograpghic

Date

2012

Contributor

-

Rights

Cutura/Newscom

Relation

-

Format

JPEG

Language

-

Type

Photo of Architectural Ruins

Still Image Item Type Metadata

Original Format

Architecture

Physical Dimensions

2000 x 1333

Collection

Citation

The Inca Empire, Doti, “Terrace Farms,” ENGL 3460 -- Literature and Utopia, accessed September 17, 2024, https://mapping-nature.org/3460-fall2021/items/show/62.

Geolocation