terrace


A level or nearly level surface cut into a slope, creating a step in the hillside. Terraces have been used for agriculture on every inhabited continent — from the rice terraces of Bali and the Philippines to the Inca andenes of Peru to the dry-farmed slopes of the Mediterranean. They turn gravity from an enemy into a tool, holding soil and water in place on ground that would otherwise shed both.
Etymology
Old French terrasse, from Latin terra, earth. A platform of earth.
Notes
The cerro de trincheras is a specific Southwestern form of terracing. The word terrace also describes the geological remnant of a former floodplain — a natural step left behind when a river cuts deeper into its valley.
agriculture human settlement mountains
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