The tougher the constraints, and the more hostile the environment, often the more innovation and creativity flourish. This is certainly true of the Incas, whose empire in the Peruvean Andes was ended by the Spanish invasion and conquest in around 1530. The story of Incan innovation is nicely documented in a recent Discovery Channel program.
The Andes Mountains have peaks higher than the highest mountain in the American Rockies. The Incas lived at elevations of around 4,000 m. Their descendants today have larger hearts and lungs than Americans or Europeans as a result.
How do you feed your people, in a cold mountainous region whose weather is notoriously unstable? By growing food. But how, on steep mountain slopes? Answer — terraces. The Incas perfected terracing — creating flat stepped areas on steep mountain slopes that resisted erosion and on which crops could be grown. They brought the soil from afar and it remains fertile to this day. They used guano (bird droppings) for fertilizer and protected the birds that supplied the guano. They were the first to plant potatoes, a vegetable brought from Peru to Europe by the Spanish, and developed more than a hundred varieties. Agronomists claim as many as half the vegetables we cultivate and consume today originated with the Incas. The Incas developed many varieties of maize (corn), also imported later to Europe. The Incas used medicinal herbs. They knew, for instance, that quinine was effective against malaria.
How do you ensure an ample water supply? The Incas built irrigation channels, diverting and even straightening whole rivers. How do you know what plants to grow, and how to grow them? By experimenting. The Incas built a remarkable experimental farm, in the shape of a huge terraced bowl. The bowl covered several temperature and climate ranges, from bottom to top. The Incas, who had no written language, were skilled mathematicians nonetheless and had a system for recording data based on knots tied on ropes. They placed water containers at various elevations in their experimental ‘bowl’ and then measured the rate at which the ice in the containers, frozen during the cold nights, thawed and became water.
Machu Picchu, discovered by an American explorer, is known as the Lost City of the Incas. Its elevation is 2,430 m. It was completed in the year 1462, then abandoned a century later, probably because its inhabitants were wiped out by smallpox brought by the Spanish, and to which the Incas had no natural resistance. Today Machu Picchu is a popular tourist site. Some of its buildings reflect the Incas’ amazing skill at building with enormous stones, transported across the mountains for huge distances.


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September 30, 2009 at 8:32 am
sarah
A few details about the Inca. Amazing culture as they were, they only reigned for 400 years (even less). The only reason they survived and thrived was because they annihilated all the other cultures in the area which thrived for thousands of years. There is an agricultural culture which lived on the coast called Moche which was innovative and creative and is hardly mentioned in the books of history. They were wiped out without a trace. They built amazing sand temples and cities with special methods to keep it from falling apart in Trujillio, and other places along the coast. The Inca were cruel and vicious, and killed all the peace loving cultures in Peru and the Andes. And yet, they are the most remembered in the history of South American tribes and cultures.
As for agricultural innovation, the innovativeness of the Nabatians here in the Middle East. Until today we are unable to repeat their success in agriculture in the dessert. These are just a few thoughts your article awakes in my mind…