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QUARRYING   AND STONECUTTING
Although    the majority    of  Inca    structures  are built   of  uncut   stone   assembled   with
clay    mortar, of  adobe   brick,  or  both,   the architectural   style   is  still   best    known   for
its  tightly     fitting     cut     stone   masonry     assembled   without     mortar.     This    masonry
style   has been    marveled    at  ever    since   the Spanish conquerors  first   saw it. One
eyewitness, for example,    said,   “And    what    one admires most    is  that,   even    though
these    [stones]    .   .   .   are     not     cut     straight,   but     differ  in  size    and     shape,  they    fit
together    with    incredible  precision   without mortar” (Acosta 1962    [1590]).
This    abandoned   stone   in  a   field   was destined    for the Inca    settlement  of
Ollantaytambo   in  the Urubamba    valley  and came    from    the rockfalls   of  Kachiqata,  5
kilometers  (3  miles)  distant on  the opposite    bank    of  the river.  Adriana von Hagen.How Inca    builders—who    lacked  iron    tools   and the wheel—cut   stone,  achieved
the tight   fit,    and transported and hoisted the stones  (some   of  which   weigh   over    a