Inca leapt canyons with fiber bridges

Wow. Inca Leapt Canyons With Fiber Bridges.

Conquistadors from Spain came, they saw, and they were astonished. They had never seen anything in Europe like the bridges of Peru. Chroniclers wrote that the Spanish soldiers stood in awe and fear before the spans of braided fiber cables suspended across deep gorges in the Andes, narrow walkways sagging and swaying and looking so frail.

Yet the suspension bridges were familiar and vital links in the vast empire of the Inca, as they had been to Andean cultures for hundreds of years before the arrival of the Spanish in 1532. The people had not developed the stone arch or wheeled vehicles, but they were accomplished in the use of natural fibers for textiles, boats, sling weapons — even keeping inventories by a prewriting system of knots.

So bridges made of fiber ropes, some as thick as a man’s torso, were the technological solution to the problem of road building in rugged terrain. By some estimates, at least 200 such suspension bridges spanned river gorges in the 16th century. [continue]

This is a New York Times article; thanks to Sarah for writing to tell me about it. Thanks to Google for helping me to find this reprinted version of the article on www-tech.mit.edu, where you won’t get hassled for a password.

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One thought on “Inca leapt canyons with fiber bridges

  1. It would be interesting to see how the MIT bridge words out. Even with a head start with sisal twine, their recreation is fascinating.

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