The ancient stones of the Inca citadel Machu Picchu, in the heart of the Peruvian Andes, are among the remaining wonders of a vanished world—and its colossal walls are held together not by mortar, but by gravity.
Machu Picchu's builders used a type of "dry stone" masonry to join the massive blocks of stone almost perfectly, beside and on top of each other. The walls consist of thousands of interlocking blocks with irregular shapes as a result, and it's suggested that their construction made them more resistant to earthquakes, because the stones can move freely in place. But it's not clear if this resilience was the intention of the builders, or perhaps a lucky accident.
"I think that their intention was simply to build something that is efficient and functional," says civil engineer Nicolas Estrada Mejia of Peru's Los Andes Peruvian University, who has studied the ancient walls. "The result is impressive."
‘Lost’ City
Machu Picchu's walls have stood for almost 600 years, although restoration work for tourism was carried out in the first decades of the 20th century. Headlines from the time suggested that Machu Picchu was a "lost city" that had been found by the American explorer Hiram Bingham. But it was never truly lost—locals had always known it was there—only abandoned due to a combination of factors related to the decline of the Inca Empire.
The no-mortar technique used to build Machu Picchu is sometimes called "ashlar" masonry, but technically that only refers to the square or rectangular blocks of stone in the walls. The Inca builders also used large "polygonal" stone blocks, each shaped exactly for the place in a wall where it was laid (such walls are found at other Inca sites, and one famous polygonal stone at the royal Inca capital of Cusco boasts 12 sides).