Inca
Trail to Machu Picchu
The different archaeological sites visited in the Inca Trail. |
|
Llaqtapata. “Terrace Town”. This settlement
was taken over from pre-Inca people and expanded by the Incas, almost
certainly as a center of food production for supplying the Inca
Trail sites and Machu Picchu itself. Though well planned and constructed,
most of the architecture is utilitarian and repetitive in style.
Runkuracay. A small site about halfway up the
climb to the second pass, it overlooks the Pacamayo valley with
a superb view back to the first pass, Warmiwañusca. It was
probably built as a lookout point for watching the highway, and
perhaps also as a tambo a traveler's lodging and temporary storehouse.
Sayaqmarca. “Inaccessible Town” in
Quechua -- and the site fits its name. Built on a narrow spur jutting
westward below the second pass, it commands a sweeping vista of
the Aobamba valley and the route ahead all the way to the third
pass, while in clear weather the snow peaks of the Pumasillo massif
fill the horizon to the west
Phuyupatamarca This “Cloud level Town”
stands where the trail crosses from south to north of the long ridge
leading to Machu Picchu. It is overlooked by flat-topped peaks whose
Inca platforms were built for viewing a breathtaking panorama of
snow peaks.
Intipata. “Sun Terraces”. This is
a mainly agricultural complex with a small residential sector, probably
built to supplement the food supply to Machu Picchu.
Wiñay Wayna. “Forever Young”
-- the name of a perennially flowering orchid formerly abundant
in this area. An imposing curved wall culminates in a temple whose
doorway faces the snow peak of Wakay Willka (Verónica). With
its chain of ceremonial baths, its intricate maze of houses, temples
and workshops, its towering waterfall, and the serene sculpture
of its terracing, nothing can compare with the intimate magic of
this Inca settlement.
|