'Deciphering these mysterious strings': How reading the Inca's knotted cords can reveal past droughts and deluges

Andean people of the past looked at these strings as a record of the climate, and they studied them to understand patterns.

Sabine Hyland leans over a tray of frayed knotted strings holding a light
The author studying specimens at a table.
(Image credit: Sabine Hyland, CC BY)

Five centuries ago, the Incas ruled the western half of South America with the help of a unique form of writing based on colored and knotted cords. These strings, called khipus, recorded major events, tracked economic matters, and even encoded biographies and poetry, according to the Spanish chroniclers who witnessed their use.

Most khipus have knots that indicate numbers that we can "read," but we've lost the ability to interpret what those numbers mean. Recent discoveries are bringing us closer to deciphering these mysterious strings. In a remote community set high in the Peruvian Andes, my team and I have found khipus that were used by villagers to track climate change.

Sabine Hyland
Professor of Social Anthropology, University of St. Andrews

An anthropologist at the University of St Andrews, Sabine Hyland studies Inca culture. A National Geographic Explorer with a Ph.D. from yale, her work has been featured in The Atlantic, Scientific American and National Geographic.

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