The Inca used couriers throughout the empire, all along the well-made trails. The couriers worked as a kind of relay team. Stationed every few miles, they could carry messages at a speed of 150 miles a day. They had to pass on memorized messages.Click to see full answer. Likewise, people ask, how did the Incas communicate with each other?A quipu, or knot-record (also called khipu), was a method used by the Incas and other ancient Andean cultures to keep records and communicate information. In the absence of an alphabetic writing system, this simple and highly portable device achieved a surprising degree of precision and flexibility.One may also ask, how did the Inca people transport goods across their empire? The Incas built a network of roads across their empire to transport goods, move troops, and send messages. The roads were made as straight as possible, but zigzagged up steep slopes. Bridges, hung from cables of twisted plant stems, were fixed across ravines and rivers. Considering this, how did the Inca send messages? As well as the roads the Incas had messengers called chasquis. Messages were carried by relay. The two messengers would run together for a while and the message was passed on from one man to the other. Using this relay system messages could be sent over long distances very quickly.Why was being a roadrunner so important to the Inca?The roadrunners were the mailmen of the Inca empire. They were allowed to run on the roads. They worked by a relay system. One roadrunner would carry a message about a mile down the road and tell it to the next roadrunner.
How did the Inca communicate across great distances?
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