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Machu Picchu Tours

About Machu Picchu Architecture
The central buildings of Machu Picchu use the classical Inca architectural style of polished dry-stone walls of regular shape.
The Incas were masters of this technique, called ashlar, in which blocks of stone are cut to fit together tightly without mortar.
The Incas were among the best stone masons the world has seen, and many junctions in the central city are so perfect that it is said not even a blade of grass fits between the stones.
Some Inca buildings were constructed using mortar, but by Inca standards this was quick, shoddy construction, and was not used in the building of important structures. Peru is a highly seismic land, and mortar-free construction was more earthquake resistant than using mortar.
The stones of the dry-stone walls built by the Incas can move slightly and resettle without the walls collapsing.
Inca walls show numerous design details that also help protect them from collapsing in an earthquake. Doors and windows are trapezoidal and tilt inward from bottom to top; corners usually are rounded; inside corners often incline slightly into the rooms; and "L"-shaped blocks often were used to tie outside corners of the structure together. These walls do not rise straight from bottom to top but are offset slightly from row to row.
Machu PicchuThe Incas never used the wheel in any practical manner. Its use in toys demonstrates that the principle was well-known to them, although it was not applied in their engineering. The lack of strong draft animals as well as terrain and dense vegetation issues may have rendered it impractical.
How they moved and placed enormous blocks of stones remains a mystery, although the general belief is that they used hundreds of men to push the stones up inclined planes. A few of the stones still have knobs on them that could have been used to lever them into position; it is believed that after the stones were placed, the Incas would have sanded the knobs away, but a few were overlooked.
The space is composed of 140 structures or features, including temples, sanctuaries, parks, and residences that include houses with thatched roofs. There are more than one hundred flights of stone steps often completely carved from a single block of granite and a great number of water fountains that are interconnected by channels and water-drains perforated in the rock that were designed for the original irrigation system. Evidence has been found to suggest that the irrigation system was used to carry water from a holy spring to each of the houses in turn.
Machu Picchu Inca Trail Tours
- The History of Cusco Peru
- Lima Peru Travel Resources
- Inca Quechua Language
- Machu Picchu Tours
- Learn About Lima Peru
- About Machu Picchu Tourism
- Discovery of Machu Picchu
- Entrance to Machu Picchu
- Cusco Peru Travel Resource Centers
- The Inca Civil War
- Machu Picchu Construction
- Climb Huayna Picchu
- Ollantaytambo Storehouses
- The Machu Picchu Visitors
- Inca Empire Expansion
- The Aguas Calientes Bus
- Inca Arts and Medicine
- Peru Historical Sanctuary
- Inca Empire Weapons
- Machu Picchu Restaurants
- The Kingdom of Cusco
- Travel to Machu Picchu Peru
- Ollantaytambo Temple Hill
- About Machu Picchu Architecture
- Machu Picchu Cusco Discoveries
- Visit Ollantaytambo Peru
- 1st Inca Ruler Manco Capac
- The Inca Last Empire
- Exported Artifacts from Peru
- Trekking the Inca Trails
- Machu Picchu Artifact Disputes
- Machu Picchu Train Service
- Ollantaytambo Terraces
- Pisac Sacred Valley Peru
- Ollantaytambo Peru
- Town of Ollantaytambo
- The Andean Civilization
- The Inca Empire
- Machu Picchu Inca Trail
- Andes Amazon Tours
- Arequipa Peru Travel
- Colca Valley Lodging
- La Campina Route
- Arequipa Sightseeing
- Arequipa Transportation
- Colca Canyon Peru
- Manu Wildlife Center
- Sandoval Lake Lodge
- The City of Arequipa
- Cock of the Rock Lodge
- Arequipa Tourism
- Peru Ecotourism EcoTravel
- The Nazca Lines Peru
- Loreto Peru Madre de Dios
- Peru Beach Tourism
- Visiting Machu Picchu Peru
- Ollantaytambo Train Stop
- Sacsayhuaman Walls Ruins Cusco
- Ucayali and Tumbes Regions
- About Lima Peru Tourism
- Lake Titicaca in Puno
- Huallaga River in San Martin
- Junin Tarma Libertad Lambayeque
- About Visiting Cusco Peru
- Moquegua Pasco Piura Peru
- Amazonas Ancash Regions of Peru
- About Tourism in Peru
- Huancavelica Huanuco Peru Ica
- Apurimac Arequipa Ayacucho Peru
- Learn About Peru Tourism
- The Machu Picchu Sections
- Travel Peru Spa Hotels
- Inca Trail Trek Machu Picchu
- About Cajamarca Callao Peru
- Machu Picchu Railroad Repairs Inca Trail
- Peru Hotel and Air Fare Rates