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#chincha — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #chincha, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Did #seabird poop fuel rise of #Chincha in #Peru?
    #Guano dramatically boosted the production of #maize (#corn), and this agricultural surplus crucially helped fuel the Chincha Kingdom’s economy, driving their trade, wealth, population growth and regional influence, and shaped their strategic alliance with the #Inca Empire. In ancient Andean cultures, fertiliser was power.”
    arstechnica.com/science/2026/0

  2. Did #seabird poop fuel rise of #Chincha in #Peru?
    #Guano dramatically boosted the production of #maize (#corn), and this agricultural surplus crucially helped fuel the Chincha Kingdom’s economy, driving their trade, wealth, population growth and regional influence, and shaped their strategic alliance with the #Inca Empire. In ancient Andean cultures, fertiliser was power.”
    arstechnica.com/science/2026/0

  3. Did poop fuel rise of in ?
    dramatically boosted the production of (), and this agricultural surplus crucially helped fuel the Chincha Kingdom’s economy, driving their trade, wealth, population growth and regional influence, and shaped their strategic alliance with the Empire. In ancient Andean cultures, fertiliser was power.”
    arstechnica.com/science/2026/0

  4. Did #seabird poop fuel rise of #Chincha in #Peru?
    #Guano dramatically boosted the production of #maize (#corn), and this agricultural surplus crucially helped fuel the Chincha Kingdom’s economy, driving their trade, wealth, population growth and regional influence, and shaped their strategic alliance with the #Inca Empire. In ancient Andean cultures, fertiliser was power.”
    arstechnica.com/science/2026/0

  5. Did #seabird poop fuel rise of #Chincha in #Peru?
    #Guano dramatically boosted the production of #maize (#corn), and this agricultural surplus crucially helped fuel the Chincha Kingdom’s economy, driving their trade, wealth, population growth and regional influence, and shaped their strategic alliance with the #Inca Empire. In ancient Andean cultures, fertiliser was power.”
    arstechnica.com/science/2026/0