New Details Emerge About Ancient Inca Counting Technology

0
7Кб

The Inca were a pre-Columbian civilization whose empire sprawled along South America’s Pacific Coast from the 15th to the 16th century CE. Like other Andean peoples, they used khipus (also known as quipus), an intricate cord and knot system used to record information. According to Spanish colonial-era sources, only male Inca elites could make khipus. A new study, however, challenges this widespread notion.

In a paper published today in Science Advances, an international team of researchers investigated the primary cord of a khipu from around 1498 CE made from human hair. Their analysis revealed that the individual who wove their hair into the khipu ate a diet commonly associated with commoners, suggesting that a greater diversity of people used the instrument than previously thought.

“Despite recent advances in our understanding of Andean khipus, scholars know little about the specialists who created Inka khipus,” the researchers wrote in the study. “With limited direct evidence concerning the lives of Inka khipu experts, our knowledge is based mainly on the chronicles of Spanish-language colonial observers.”

Inca Quipu
An Incan khipu in Lima, Peru. © Claus Ableiter nur hochgeladen aus enWiki, CC BY-SA 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/, via Wikimedia Commons

Researchers believe that khipus were buried alongside their owners when they died. Unfortunately, however, the burials where experts have discovered many Inca khipus were previously looted, meaning they can no longer provide this crucial insight. As such, the team from the new study took a different approach.

“Historically, when human hair was incorporated into a khipu’s primary cord, it served as a ‘signature’ to indicate the person who created the khipu,” the researchers explained. “Recent advances in elemental analysis–isotope ratio mass spectrometry allowed us to undertake simultaneous carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and sulfur (S) measurements from a single KH0631 hair sample, revealing that this individual consumed a diet characteristic of low-ranking commoners,” they added. “This evidence suggests that Inka commoners could be involved in creating Inka-style khipus.”

Specifically, the individual in question ate tubers and greens instead of meat and corn, which was the typical Inca elite’s diet. The researchers’ approach also revealed that this khipu specialist, or khipukamayuqs, probably lived in modern-day southern Peru or northern Chile.

These results align with the fact that in the 19th and 20th centuries, “commoners,” such as peasant farmers, farm laborers, and female peasants, created and used khipus. What’s more, it bolsters recent research as well as accounts by Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala, a 16th-century Inca nobleman and chronicler, that women in the Inca Empire also made khipus.

While the researchers admit that “KH0631 is only one khipu,” they conclude that “the new isotopic evidence from KH0631 suggests that khipu literacy in the Inca Empire may have been more inclusive and widespread than hitherto thought.”

Like
Love
Haha
3
Поиск
Категории
Больше
Tech
After the Mustang, Ford Is Teasing the Return of Another Beloved Car As an EV
Ford is promising a revolution. The company plans...
От DueFinance6737 2025-08-09 17:09:02 0 8Кб
News
Lý do tiền đạo Nguyễn Xuân Son không trở lại Việt Nam?
Tiền đạo Nguyễn Xuân Son chưa thể trở lại Việt Nam...
От Upstairsyaa 2025-08-09 13:40:07 0 8Кб
News
Cần nắm hết thủ tục để làm một lần là xong!
Làm thủ tục đăng ký thường trú cần đáp ứng điều kiện...
От huntsman33 2025-08-19 15:04:15 0 8Кб
News
Sau sáp nhập, đây là địa phương được giới bất động sản gọi là 'vùng đất kim cương', giá vẫn còn rất rẻ, Sun Group đầu tư đại đô thị
Bất động sản tỉnh đang được giới bất động sản quan...
От queenncherryy 2025-07-08 07:40:05 0 10Кб
Xã Hội
Sau cơn bĩ cực, 3 tuổi lội ngược dòng giàu bất ngờ từ 1/6 âm
Mỗi người trong chúng ta đều có những thời điểm khó khăn, những thử thách tưởng chừng như không...
От Snakefisherbub 2025-06-25 09:11:09 0 9Кб