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Hardware Hacking Science

MIT Students Show How the Inca Leapt Canyons 185

PCOL writes "When Conquistadors came to Peru from Spain in 1532, they were astonished to see Inca suspension bridges achieve clear spans of at least 150 feet at a time when the longest Roman bridge in Spain had a maximum span of 95 feet. The bridges swayed under the weight of traffic terrifying the Spanish and their horses, even though, as one Spaniard observed, they were almost as "sturdy as the street of Seville." To build the bridges, thick cables were pulled across a river with small ropes and attached to stone abutments on each side. Three of the big cables served as the floor of the bridge, two others served as handrails and pieces of wood were tied to the cable floor before the floor was strewn with branches to give firm footing for beasts of burden. Earlier this year students at MIT built a 70-foot fiber bridge in the style of the Incan Empire. The project used sisal twine from the Yucatan Peninsula and anchored it by wrapping it around massive concrete blocks. The weekend's burst of activity was preceded by 360 hours of rope-twisting as the 50 miles of sisal twine was turned into rope. Working together as a group was part of the exercise. "A third of the time was spent learning to work together," one of the students said. "But after a while, we were banging those cables out.""
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MIT Students Show How the Inca Leapt Canyons

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  • You decide...
  • This story came straight from the just-like-ninjas dept.
  • w00t (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Zackbass ( 457384 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @09:43PM (#21394187)
    Haha, talk about a late story at a completely random time. I was one of the leaders on the project, lots of late nights twisting twine together. If anyone has any questions feel free to ask.
    • Re:w00t (Score:5, Funny)

      by Nimey ( 114278 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @09:51PM (#21394225) Homepage Journal

      If anyone has any questions feel free to ask.
      Why is a mouse when it spins?
    • by hjf ( 703092 )
      yes. I'd like to see your hands looked after twisting sisal for so many hours. Oh, the stupid things they made us do at school with that thing...
      • Re:w00t (Score:5, Informative)

        by Zackbass ( 457384 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:01PM (#21394293)
        Oh man, it wasn't pretty. My hands are pretty worn in from working on cars and in machine shops a lot of the time but they were always sore and red after a night of twisting. Sometimes I wore my mechanix gloves, but they don't give the feel really needed to work it fast.
        • by Dunbal ( 464142 )
          after a night of twisting

                In a different time and place that phrase would have a completely different meaning. (whistling "Let's twist again!"...)
          • after a night of twisting

            In a different time and place that phrase would have a completely different meaning. (whistling "Let's twist again!"...)
            Or different meaning to Hari Seldon perhaps?
            • Or different meaning to Hari Seldon perhaps

              Great! Another series to add to my overflowing reading list.
    • Re:w00t (Score:4, Interesting)

      by hejish ( 852589 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @11:03PM (#21394623) Journal
      How do you get the cable across the wide expanse? arrow + thin rope pulls thicker rope? Did someone have to start on the other side somehow - like from a long trek? These questions went unaddressed.
      • Re:w00t (Score:5, Funny)

        by russ1337 ( 938915 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @11:12PM (#21394655)
        Exactly. When I read the title, I thought they'd be delving into how the first guy 'leaped' across the 150ft canyons.... I was thinking they flung a midget inca over the crevase by trebuchet or something... the article did not tell me, so I'm moving forward believing it was midget Inca's and trebuchets.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Z80xxc! ( 1111479 )
        I was wondering the same thing. I would assume that if it's across water, they'd use a boat, and if it were across land, they'd take a looooong hike. Of course, once they had one bridge in across a particular obstacle, future bridges would be easier since you could just cross the existing one(s).
        • I would assume that if it's across water, they'd use a boat, and if it were across land, they'd take a looooong hike.

          The problem with that plan is that you need to take a really looooong string along with you. By the time you reach the other side, your string is wound between trees, looped around rocks, etc. You'd have a lot of trouble pulling it taut.
      • This is not exactly new the technique is still used today and various people have built Inca style bridges in the past few decades.
        Getting the initial thin ropes across you just have them drop them from the opposing sides tie them together and away you go. Now it gets fun it the bridge is over a river or a very,very deep valley, in thoses cases it looks like they would shoot from one side let gravity and the force carry the projective and rope across to the other side and then climb down.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Did you "walk" the rope up and down, or how did you actually get the cables together? Does MIT now need a "Street of the Ropemakers" as is found in so many ancient cities? I'm asking because in a burst of insanity a number of years ago I learned how to spin woolen thread from raw wool--first with an ancient-style "drop" spindle, then with a distaff, and finally with a spinning wheel. It is...tedious. My understanding is that before the burst of technology that developed the drop spindle, thread or yarn (for
      • by Sanat ( 702 )
        Indeed the smaller threads were made by rubbing the fibers against the hands or for larger against the leg.

        For the really big threads I imagine that they probably used Rosie's legs.
    • Was one of the purposes of the project to prepare crypto-archeologists for the threats that they will be facing for when they travel to remote places to prevent ancient powerful artifacts from falling into the hands of evil geniuses?

      If so: Well done!

      • by Sentri ( 910293 )
        Runaway, a Road Adventure: Nice call! I enjoyed that game alot, though the relationships seemes a little weird at times
    • How do you get the first rope across?
  • Science! (Score:5, Informative)

    by proudfoot ( 1096177 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @09:44PM (#21394189)
    People here seem to be missing the point - it isn't that this stuff isn't trivial compared to todays engineering, it is. But it's more revealing about the fact that non-western civilizations had an advanced grasp of the physics/science behind this stuff. They knew how to take advantage of rope tension. A bridge like this isn't so impressive today. It's easy to build. But to come up with the design is the hard part.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      Nah, the Sumerian Gods told them how to do it... They'll be back around 2012 - you can get the real scoop from them at that time.. that is, as long as the humans aren't turned into a slave race - AGAIN.
    • Re:Science! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Jarjarthejedi ( 996957 ) <christianpinch@g ... om minus painter> on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:00PM (#21394289) Journal
      Precisely. History has always been extremely biased (the winner writes the books) and tended to show ancient people as stupid compared to us, especially the ancient non-European people (here in the US at least, I'd guess that other countries have similar slants). Yet again we're shown that ancient people had a grasp of the world that is surprisingly advanced, and that non-European cultures were just as advanced even if they didn't use gunpowder or some of the other things the Europeans had.

      Good article, I always enjoy learning about these sorts of things where someone tries to recreate an ancient feat, using authentic technology. They're almost always informative and teach us that we're not so far advanced beyond older cultures, and no one group has ever known the sum knowledge of the world, one group always seems to know more about one thing, and other groups about other things.
      • Re:Science! (Score:4, Informative)

        by Technician ( 215283 ) on Sunday November 18, 2007 @02:39AM (#21395637)
        and that non-European cultures were just as advanced even if they didn't use gunpowder or some of the other things the Europeans had.


        Don't give the Europeans credit for Gunpowder. Poor choice for the example.

        http://inventors.about.com/od/chineseinventors/a/gunpowder.htm [about.com]
        • by jadavis ( 473492 )

          Don't give the Europeans credit for Gunpowder. Poor choice for the example.

          It's not about who invented the gunpowder.

          Europeans in the Americas had huge advantages because they made use of the inventions and discoveries made by a large number of people over a long period of time, whereas American natives were much more isolated. Even within the Americas, discoveries didn't move around as much, because the Americas are mostly North/South and discoveries move more easily along similar latitudes (because of cli
      • "History has ... tended to show ancient people as stupid compared to us, especially the ancient non-European people (here in the US at least...). Yet again we're shown that ancient people had a grasp of the world that is surprisingly advanced, and that non-European cultures were just as advanced even if they didn't use gunpowder or some of the other things the Europeans had."

        I understand that this is the canon view, but seriously: where were you educated?
        I'm 40 so my main primary education was in the 70s in
        • "I understand that this is the canon view, but seriously: where were you educated?"

          Public school. The basic teaching was 'Here, look at these great Roman people, look what wonders they built. Oh and China was doing some interesting stuff too, but hey look! Conquistadors, weren't they great? Those silly Native Americans, not knowing how to use guns, too bad for them.'

          Every history class I've been in has treated the Roman culture as significantly more advanced than anything before or at the same time, and the
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by E++99 ( 880734 )

        History has always been extremely biased (the winner writes the books) and tended to show ancient people as stupid compared to us.

        Yep. Just look at the Neanderthals. Based on the evidence we have to go on (brain size), they were a lot smarter than us. Yet look how we portray them.

        Admittedly part of this may be because they were discovered very shortly after the success of Darwin, and so automatically became the "missing link," and remained that way in the public consciousness. Maybe if they had only bee

    • Re:Science! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:14PM (#21394363)
      It's one of those "how the heck did they do that" things.

      Take the Pyramides. Yes, it's trivial for us today to build something like that (ok, trivial... but take a few machines and you'll have one of those heaps of stones assembled quite quickly). But we're talking something around 3000 BC, so ... how?

      Here some group sat down and showed us just how they did it back then. It's where archeology meets engineering... archeoengineering, if you want.

      Ok, maybe it doesn't give us any new insight for our bridges of today. But it sure closes yet another gap and answers yet another question in our quest to find out about former civilisations and cultures.
      • Re:Science! (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Volante3192 ( 953645 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:30PM (#21394459)
        Actually, the engineering of the pyramids is still surprising us; not only was the construction of the pyramid incredible, but the actual quarrying and shaping of the stones is still unsurpassed. Sheets of paper won't fit through the gaps between blocks, and there's no mortar.

        Attempting to build a duplicate pyramid today would still be a massive undertaking that would take years; hardly a trivial task.
        • The finely finished blocks are only on the outside. Inside, the blocks are quite rough and don't fit together tightly.

          This is pretty common in ancient stonework. For example, the famous Inca stonework at sites like Sacsayhuaman look fantastic - the joints look almost organic, they're so close - but that's just the outer edges of the blocks. Behind the surface, the block edges are quite rough.

          The real engineering miracles in large structures like the pyramids are of social organisation and agricultural produ
          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by sjames ( 1099 )

            The finely finished blocks are only on the outside. Inside, the blocks are quite rough and don't fit together tightly.

            Trust me, nothing's changed. The most common statements on a construction site today are:

            1. Don't worry, they'll sheetrock over it
            2. The whole world's an inch off plumb.
            3. Where's the sledgehammer?
        • Be carefull how you state that, the quarrying and shaping is surpassed. Using water beams it is both easy and fast. We can even shape them manually using sandpaper, it is just no one can imagine sandpapering that many rocks. What a grind, those egyptians must really have had no life at all.
      • How they did it (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Descalzo ( 898339 )

        Take the Pyramides. Yes, it's trivial for us today to build something like that (ok, trivial... but take a few machines and you'll have one of those heaps of stones assembled quite quickly). But we're talking something around 3000 BC, so ... how?

        From Red Dwarf:
        Rimmer: No, Lister, I mean like the pyramids. How did they move such massive pieces of stone without the aid of modern technology?
        Lister: They had massive whips, Rimmer. Massive, massive whips.

    • by evanbd ( 210358 )

      Exactly. There are lots of things you could build today with old technology if you have the know-how. A valveless pulsejet engine is well within reach of early 19th century metalworking and fuel technology, for example, as is the airframe to fly it in -- but the techniques to make the engine, shape the wings, and control it weren't known.

      The first major use of differential equations as relates to contruction wasn't until the construction of the Eiffel Tower, where they were used to calculate beam loadin

    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      People here seem to be missing the point - it isn't that this stuff isn't trivial compared to todays engineering, it is. But it's more revealing about the fact that non-western civilizations had an advanced grasp of the physics/science behind this stuff.

      I think that you missed the point. Enough of us are not so ethnocentric that we think that every other culture is backwards and stupid. When their injunuity is presented to us as "news" it only points out the stupidity of those who think that it's neat. P

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        When their injunuity is presented to us

        Injunuity: noun.
        The annual return of previously invested Native Americans.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Dunbal ( 464142 )
      They knew how to take advantage of rope tension... ...But to come up with the design is the hard part.

      Meh, trial and error becomes easy if you have countless slaves to practice with. What the Inca were REALLY famous for was their ability to direct and control the flow of water. Their canals were really impressive, apparently.
    • People here seem to be missing the point - it isn't that this stuff isn't trivial compared to todays engineering, it is. But it's more revealing about the fact that non-western civilizations had an advanced grasp of the physics/science behind this stuff.

      I'm not sure how building a bridge displays knowledge of the science which is relevant to bridge building. I've seen a 2-year-old build a bridge and I'm pretty sure he wasn't au fait with the physics of beam bridges before he put one block on top of two o

      • Have you considered the cost of doing this by 'trial and error'? You need a lot of people, it takes a lot of time, a lot of materials, and you have to expend immense political capital even to motivate one attempt. Certainly designs evolve over time, but serious engineering thought clearly went into the original undertakings. I can't imagine how you can think otherwise.

        Then again, perhaps you consider any application of the empirical method to be 'trial and error'—in which case what we do today is no

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Jason Earl ( 1894 )

          The Inca apparently didn't use the wheel, and they had no system of writing. With thousands of miles of road and no good way to share knowledge I'd basically guarantee that the Incas figured out how to build these bridges by trial and error. They'd throw a bridge across a ravine and it would work, and so next they would try and throw one across a wider ravine and it would fail (probably throwing people to their death). They would then take a good hard look at where it failed, and they would try something

      • Re:Science! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by camperdave ( 969942 ) on Sunday November 18, 2007 @12:11AM (#21394983) Journal
        I'm not sure how building a bridge displays knowledge of the science... Trial and error will suffice...

        Um... Trial and error *IS* science.
        • Actually, I'm not really sure that that's a fair statement. Trial and error can certainly be a very important part of experimentation, which is certainly a very important part of science, but just because you're using trial and error does not mean that you're accomplishing scientific research.

          I can take 20 different jars of baby food and give a spoonful of each to a baby until I find a list of flavors that she likes, that's some pretty basic trial and error. But at the end of the day, have I accomplished an
    • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

      But to come up with the design is the hard part.
      It's not that hard. Trial and error could have came up with it. What the Conquistadors saw was the last attempt that was successful for the Incans. What they didn't see was the dozens of past attempts and the unfortunate victims 150 feet below.
    • by rossdee ( 243626 )
      "But it's more revealing about the fact that non-western civilizations had an advanced grasp of the physics/science behind this stuff."

      I fail to see how the Incas were a non-western civilisation. The lived in 'the west' (compared to europe), and they certainly had an advanced civilisation, even if they didn't have the wheel or horses.
    • Re:Science! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by kklein ( 900361 ) on Sunday November 18, 2007 @01:17AM (#21395297)

      Okay, a lot of people are already saying this, but they're not being modded up, and I don't have mod points, so I'll just join in:

      But it's more revealing about the fact that non-western civilizations had an advanced grasp of the physics/science behind this stuff.

      There is absolutely no reason to think the Incas knew anything of the sort, any more than "nature" knows how to fly, because there are birds. It's evolutionary. Ideas that work stick around and propagate. Ideas that don't result in smashed Incas at the bottom of a ravine. Those ideas don't stick around.

      Most good cooks can't tell you the complex series of chemical reactions that result in deliciousness; they just learned via trial, error, and someone showing them what to do.

      How's your understanding of English grammar? Do you know how to diagram sentences down to the morphological level? Do you know how the tense/aspect system works in English? Do you know about semantic features, etc? I do, but I had to go to grad school to learn it. I have, however, been successfully speaking English for at least 31 years!

      Success at any task is not necessarily indication of an understanding of the theory behind it.

      I get so tired of people praising stone-age cultures as though they were so much more advanced than we like to think just because they could pile some damn rocks really high or, given several millennia of sky-watching, could notice patterns in the night sky. None of this is special and none of it is indicative of the kind of detailed, theoretical knowledge that the modern, largely Western, world has developed and is continuing to develop. If these filthy savages had been so great, they would have colonized us and our stupid hunter-gatherer lifestyles would have been destroyed (which, of course, did happen, when the Roman Empire came all the way up to the hellhole that was the British Isles, from whence my family originally hails).

      It's just simple evolution. Useful ideas that strengthen communities survive, others do not. That doesn't mean that the willful genocide of various primitive peoples the Europeans ran into was the "right" thing to do, but the destruction of their cultures and the re-appropriation of their resources was inevitable. I have no "white guilt," and I'm not sorry that I grew up on land my ancestors stole from people who had no written language, lived in animal-skin huts, and hadn't even developed farming. I don't feel any need to pretend any of these cultures were anything more than Paleo- to Neolithic cultures lost in time while the rest of the world (i.e. the cultures of Eurasia, each leading during different epochs) went on without them.

      Is the ability to build such bridges cool? Hell, yes! But it is not particularly special.

  • The only things they brought to Peru were horses, guns and syphilis! The only thing they took away was gold!
  • by wrigglywrollypolary ( 1190483 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:30PM (#21394457)
    I was walking around campus one day and saw the cement pillars going up. They were BIG concrete boxes, about 4 stacked up taller than me and about 2-3 feet on a side. I'm not sure what happened to that concrete but it seemed wasteful to make _just_ rectangular prisms. No offense, especially since I'm a 'utility-focused' engineer, myself, but I did think-- wow, these are harsh. It might have been fun to paint, or sculpt them (before being set, or with plaster afterwards), with Incan designs or information about the construction process.

    The rope bridge itself looked fun to walk on, but it had a sign saying no trespass. That sign was up the whole time the bridge was there, though it is possible people might have walked around the bridge for fun and jumped around to see how it swayed and bubbled. At that point the bridge might have been up a while and losing tension and so the sides of the shallow creek interfered with the hanging bridge aspect.

    It's great to see thought provoking structures go up around campus. Rock on.
    • by Zackbass ( 457384 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:42PM (#21394521)
      The deal with the concrete blocks was that they were provided to us quite cheaply by one of the companies doing construction at Sloan. They brought them in, put them where we told them to, and took them back when we were done so we couldn't do much to them. Without them stacked up like that it would have been horribly difficult to get the normal force required on the brick surrounding the Stata center (which of course we couldn't even think about touching).

      About the sign, we assumed it would be wholly ignored. We needed it to satisfy the safety office I think (I wasn't involved with that end of the planning much).
    • by plover ( 150551 ) *
      Don't worry about the concrete blocks being "wasteful". Construction firms use them all the time as weights, counterweights and for stabilizing temporary construction work. I'm sure these were just some from their stock, and were not cast specifically for being "temporary rope bridge pillars".
  • by psychgeek ( 838231 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @10:41PM (#21394511)
    The descendants of the original bridge builders still do this each year at one of the original sites, using techniques handed down by previous generations. Photos here:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inca_rope_bridge#Renewing_the_last_bridge [wikipedia.org]
  • by Schwern ( 85675 ) on Saturday November 17, 2007 @11:46PM (#21394835) Homepage
    Back in 1997 NOVA did an episode, "Secrets of Lost Empires: Inca" [pbs.org], where they went to Peru and filmed the natives building a grass suspension bridge in the traditional style. I'd recommend watching it if you want to see one of these things under construction, it really it amazing how they go from dry grass to a sturdy rope bridge.
  • by zippthorne ( 748122 ) on Sunday November 18, 2007 @12:34AM (#21395113) Journal
    These aren't suspension bridges, as the comparison to the George Washington bridge in the article clearly shows. They are rope bridges.

    The difference is that the walking surface is not suspended from the overhead cables. It is instead supported by tension in the ropes that compose it.

    The critical difference from the MIT bridge and the monkey bridges many of us made in the scouts is that it was supported by concrete blocks instead of lashed wooden A-frames and stakes. And that the MIT students put a rather impressive number of hours into making and thoroughly vetting their own rope and design.
  • This happened years ago at IIT Madras, India http://www.civil.iitm.ac.in/events/paper-bridge.html [iitm.ac.in]
  • Trajan's bridge over the Danube (built between 103 and 105) was over a thousand meters long and 15 meters wides. Each individual arch that made up the bridge was over 35 meters long. Roman bridges in Spain that still exist extend over 800 meters. And then there are the various Byzantine bridges ... Not to mention the two mile long pontoon bridge built by the Persians so that their foot soldiers and cavalry could cross the Hellespont prior to the battle of Thermompylae. Sure, a 150 foot rope bridge is a ne
    • by Riktov ( 632 )

      What the article says is:

      "The Inca suspension bridges achieved clear spans of at least 150 feet, probably much greater. This was a longer span than any European masonry bridges at the time. The longest Roman bridge in Spain had a maximum span between supports of 95 feet." (my emphasis)

      Trajan's bridge was long destroyed by the time of the Spanish Empire, and it wasn't in Spain, thus the Inca bridges had longer spans than anything the Conquistadores had ever seen. They were duly impressed, as they certai

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        What the article says is:

        "The Inca suspension bridges achieved clear spans of at least 150 feet, probably much greater. This was a longer span than any European masonry bridges at the time. The longest Roman bridge in Spain had a maximum span between supports of 95 feet." (my emphasis)

        And what the post you replied to said is:

        "Roman bridges in Spain that still exist extend over 800 meters."

        The grandparent post was consciously directly contradicting the article, so I don't see your point.

        • by Riktov ( 632 )
          800 meters in total length, but the spans (distance between supports) were no more than 95 feet. The Inca bridges had spans over 150 feet.

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