Terraced Agriculture: A Step in the Right Direction?

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Powell, M. (2015). Terraced Agriculture: A Step in the Right Direction? Solutions 6(6): 74–77. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/2015/6/terraced-agriculture-a-step-in-the-right-direction

Solutions in History

Terraced Agriculture: A Step in the Right Direction? by Maisie Powell

Shawn Harquail

Remnants of the Moray Agricultural Terraces, designed by the Inca beside Machu Picchu. The site descends to a depth of approximately 150 meters, with a highly effective drainage system at the bottom.

O

ur current system of industrial agriculture is destructive and has a variety of negative impacts on both the environment and human health. Conventional, large-scale monocropping relies heavily on inputs from cheap labor and fossil fuels in the form of food transportation, cultivation, and fertilization. It produces outputs such as pollution, massive amounts of waste, land degradation, and little in the way of healthy, diversified crops. The problems of this system have become common knowledge to most and plenty of scientific assessments

have contributed to our society’s knowledge of the impacts of our dominant agriculture system, including its large ecological footprint and its ecological degradation and overexploitation of renewable and nonrenewable resources.1 Unsurprisingly, people are today looking to new ways of producing food for our growing population while keeping our natural environment healthy. In many instances, older, traditional models can provide guidance and insight. In the U.S., there has been a grassroots, bottom–up push

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to establish food systems that are an integral part of our landscapes and ecosystems. Our current system often faces trade-offs between agricultural production and biodiversity and other ecosystem services. The challenge lies in increasing provisioning services, such as food production, by 70 percent for 2050 according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) for a rapidly increasing population while simultaneously conserving or enhancing biodiversity and the other types of ecosystem services within agricultural systems.2 By


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