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American Indian Museum to host public broadcasts focusing on the Inka Road

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian is hosting a series of public satellite broadcasts featuring a multinational team of researchers, engineers and archaeologists who are working in Peru on the origins and engineering of the Inka Road of South America.

Image of the Inka Road by Lucia Abranovich Cusco

The series of four broadcasts will take place in the museum’s fourth-level classroom Friday, July 15; Sunday, July 17; Tuesday, July 19; and Wednesday, July 20, from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. The final two broadcasts will be webcast at www.AmericanIndian.si.edu/webcasts. Audience members across the world are invited to submit questions for the research team via the museum’s Facebook page and Twitter feed.

One of civilization’s most impressive engineering achievements, the Inka Road (or Qhapaq ñan, “The Royal Road”) was built without the use of iron, the wheel or stock animals. While much has been written about the Inka Empire as a whole, little has been published on how the Inka planned and built the road, which united the four regions of the ancient empire that encompassed large territories of present-day Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, Argentina and Chile. At its height, the Inka Road and its attendant “chaski” (runner) system was the fastest communication network in the New World, and the system of roads remains an integral part of infrastructure for present-day indigenous communities.

Image of the Inka Road by Lucia Abranovich Cusco

These broadcasts will explore new theories and discoveries about the construction of the Inka Road and how these ancient techniques can be applied by modern engineers and city planners. The research will also be highlighted in a subsequent exhibition at the museum in Washington, D.C.

The research team in Peru is led by the museum’s Latin America scholars Ramiro Matos and Jose Barreiro, and joined by Cliff Schexnayder, Eminent Scholar Emeritus at Arizona State University; Ed Jaselskis, the inaugural Jimmy D. Clark Distinguished Professor in Construction Engineering and Management at North Carolina State University; Wu Chueh Hung, professor of civil engineering at National Taiwan University; Manop Kaewmoracharoen, professor of engineering at Chiang Mai University in Thailand; and students from the Universidad de Piura in Peru, the Universidad Nacional de Cordoba in Argentina, the Universidad Catolica de Chile, the Universidad Tecnica Particular de Loja in Ecuado and the University of Colorado at Boulder.

 

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