Detail  of  a   terrace wall    at  Tarahuasi,  west    of  Cuzco,  composed    of  stones  fitted  in
the polygonal   style.  Adriana von Hagen.Extensive    experiments     have    demonstrated    that    the     process     is  effective   and
precise,    and not as  time    consuming   as  one might   assume. Twenty  quarry  workers
laboring    side    by  side    could   rough   out a   block   4.5 meters  long,   3.2 meters  wide,
and 1.7 meters  high—the    dimensions  of  one of  the largest building    blocks  in  the
ancient Inca    quarry  of  Kachiqhata—in   fewer   than    15  days.   Smaller blocks, like
those   at  Rumicollca, can be  shaped  in  about   two hours.
The  most    intriguing  question    about   Inca    cut     stonemasonry    concerns    the
precision    fitting     of  the     blocks.     It  has     been    repeatedly  argued  that    Inca
stonemasons ground  the blocks  into    place   using   a   mixture of  sand    and water.  The
evidence,    however,    does    not     support     this    hypothesis.     Where   walls   have    been
dismantled  or  fallen  apart   one finds   the exact   imprint of  the stones  that    have
been    removed or  fallen  off.    The shape   of  an  imprint determines  a   unique  position
for the stone   that    it  once    accommodated.   To  grind   in  a   stone,  however,    requires
that    the stone   can move    freely  along   a   path    in  at  least   one direction.  Thus,   the
ground   stone   would   fit     in  any,    and     not     just    one,    position    along   that    path.
Furthermore,    if  the stones  had been    ground  into    place,  the joints  should  show
signs   of  abrasion,   but they    do  not.    Instead one finds   the typical pit-marks,  which
result  from    pounding.