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The Last Incan Grass Bridge

Incas are famous for developing bridges, and that bridge is never set ordinary

ideas like iron likewise unsuccessful in their search for iron. In contrast, they saw the

fibers as an object of aesthetic pleasure. The ships were constructed entirely of fiber. It

was built of fibers and had the strength to sever the blade of a Spanish sword in half. It

was thought that there were as many as 200 braids created from twisted mountain

grass and other flora, with cables as thick as a person's breast. For at least three

hundred years before the construction of Europe's first suspension bridge, the Incas

were traversing longer distances and more profound valleys than even Europe's finest

stone-working engineers were capable of doing. (Foer, FEB. 22 2011)

The second article is about the incan grass Q'eswachaka bridge. This part of

Peru's Canas Province was the only link between towns on either side of the river for

hundreds of years. One of the rope suspension bridges created by the Inca Empire to

connect the enormous area via the Great Inca Road, which traverses across the

country's most northern regions, was this one. There were no restrictions on the

movement of troops, messengers, or ordinary citizens, thanks to the road's length of

over 25,000 miles. (HEIMSATH, AUGUST 31, 2018)


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Similar to the last article, this article also represented the history of incan grass

bridges. The authors define the ideas about these masterpieces, how the ancients

created them, and how they are the essential part of connected two economic bridges.

Differences both are in mains way The first is about the last incan bridge in South

America and the second is about the most surprising last incan bridge in Q'eswachaka

bridge. Q'eswachaka bridge is about the culture how their people live style how they

help themselves. In contrast, the South America bridge article is about the grass

bridges' histories based on centuries. The construction of this 90-foot-long bridge, which

joined two sides of a treacherous canyon, involved a series of hairpin turns. According

to the locals, it has been in place for at least 500 years now.
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Works Cited

Foer, J. (FEB. 22 2011) The Last Incan Grass Bridge, [Online], Available:
http://www.slate.com/articles/life/world_of_wonders/2011/02/the_last_incan_grass_bridge.html.

HEIMSATH, J. (AUGUST 31, 2018) This Suspension Bridge Is Made From Grass, [Online],
Available: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/article/inca-grass-rope-bridge-
qeswachaka-unesco.

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