The wonderful beauty of the sacred valley of the Incas

Sacred Valley is the name of the sacred valley of the Incas, where there are unique ancient architectures that so far have not been solved.

The Sacred Valley of the Incas (Sacred Valley of the Incas) is also known as the Urubamba Valley. This is a valley in the Peruvian Andes, near the city of Cuzco, the ancient capital of the Inca empire, and near the ancient city of Machu Picchu, one of the current 7 Wonders of the World.

Picture 1 of The wonderful beauty of the sacred valley of the Incas
Sacred Valley also owns the largest terraced fields located in the center of a very large size, and the depth goes down to about 150 meters.

Like many of Inca's construction works, the walls here are very large. The rocks have an uneven shape, but when put together they are suitable, fit, the uniqueness of the Inca construction works without the help of mortar. Sacred Valley also owns the largest terraced fields located in the center of a very large size, and the depth goes down to about 150 meters, leading to a round bottom for drainage, to prevent flooding.

Although it has been dating for thousands of years, the ancient Inca structures and drainage systems still make admirable scientists admire today. Viewed from above, the Inca ruins in Sacred Valley become massive and extremely flashy.

Being forgotten by the outside world for centuries, the valley has returned to the world's attention thanks to archaeologist Hiram Bingham, who rediscovered this place in 1911 and wrote a very sold book run about it. Archaeological evidence shows that Machu Picchu is not a normal city, but a resort town of the Inca nobility.

Picture 2 of The wonderful beauty of the sacred valley of the Incas
The walls here are very large.

Until now, it was still unknown how the Incas transported and arranged the stones when the evidence showed that they did not use the wheels. And then the Sacred Valley valley becomes one of the most unexplained mysteries of humankind.

In 2000, about 400,000 people visited Machu Picchu, and UNESCO expressed concern about the possible degradation of the site by such a large number of visitors.