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by mmooss
531 days ago
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Thanks. Are you summarizing the thread or is that based on evidence and research? I don't see the explanatory power of those theories. > Oral transmission via an apprentice system Oral transmission has probably existed everywhere (apprenticeship is a matter of definition, but I get the idea), but very few have achieved anything like the Incas. > Quipus as a form of proto-writing Quipus are just numbers, as far as I know. They are great, but don't explain how the enormous amount of other necessary information is transmitted and updated across such a vast geography. With due respect, what we need is actual research based on actual evidence, not Internet comments (I'm not offering any theories myself!). |
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I recommend “Tinkuqchaka: A Suspension Bridge over the Upper Pampas River, Ayacucho, Peru” from Lidio M. Valdez, and Cirilo Vivanco. Published in the Journal of Anthropological Research, 2021.
It has its limitations of course. It describes present day rope bridge building practices and there is no guarantee that those practices are the same as in days of old. But given that the bridges themselves rot away and the ancients are not around to interview this is likely the best description you will ever get.