Colcas – Storehouses for an Empire
Surplus food, clothing, raw materials, and other items were kept in state storage facilities called colcas. Colcas were part of the Inka system of storing food and goods from every suyu and redistributing them among the empire’s inhabitants. This system guaranteed the survival of the empire and its people in years when harvests were poor.
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Storage
Here is an example of how chuño (dried potatoes) were stored inside ceramic vessels.
CloseAirflow
Inka engineers understood the environment and built colcas to take advantage of natural airflow to keep stored items fresh.
CloseColca Center
In certain places along the Inka Road, large clusters of colcas stored goods for redistribution throughout the empire. Some provincial centers contained several hundred colcas that could be filled with food, textiles, weapons, and other items needed for daily life.
CloseColcas – Storehouses for an Empire
Surplus food, clothing, raw materials, and other items were kept in state storage facilities called colcas. Colcas were part of the Inka system of storing food and goods from every suyu and redistributing them among the empire’s inhabitants. This system guaranteed the survival of the empire and its people in years when harvests were poor.
Storage
Here is an example of how chuño (dried potatoes) were stored inside ceramic vessels.
Airflow
Inka engineers understood the environment and built colcas to take advantage of natural airflow to keep stored items fresh.
Colca Center
In certain places along the Inka Road, large clusters of colcas stored goods for redistribution throughout the empire. Some provincial centers contained several hundred colcas that could be filled with food, textiles, weapons, and other items needed for daily life.