Mayan traders were known to transport their goods via b. canoe
For all their advancements, the Maya never came up with the wheel and did not have donkeys and horses to carry goods when they were trading. They therefore had two main ways of transporting goods:
- goods were carried by people on their backs
- goods were carried in very large canoes that could take over 15 people sometimes
The Maya who carried goods on their backs were normally enslaved people or people who they paid to carry the goods and so large quantities of goods could not be traded overland effectively.
In conclusion, the Maya used both canoes and people to transport goods.
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Answer and Explanation:
Yet the Incas, and the civilizations before them, coaxed harvests from the Andes' sharp slopes and intermittent waterways. They developed resilient breeds of crops such as potatoes, quinoa and corn. ... The ghost of the Incas' farming achievements still shadows the Andes.