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  2. Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_Terraces_of_the...

    The Ifugao Rice Terraces reach a higher altitude and were built on steeper slopes than many other terraces. The Ifugao complex of stone or mud walls and the careful carving of the natural contours of hills and mountains combine to make terraced pond fields, coupled with the development of intricate irrigation systems, harvesting water from the ...

  3. Banaue Rice Terraces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banaue_Rice_Terraces

    The Banaue Rice Terraces (Filipino: Hagdan-hagdang Palayan ng Banawe) ... It is commonly thought that the terraces were built with minimal equipment, ...

  4. Longsheng Rice Terraces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longsheng_Rice_Terraces

    The terraced fields were mostly built about 650 years ago. [2] Longji (Dragon's Backbone) Terraced Rice Fields received their name because the rice terraces resemble a dragon's scales, while the summit of the mountain range looks like the backbone of the dragon.

  5. List of historical markers of the Philippines in the ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical_markers...

    Ifugao Rice Terraces: Site Site The highest, best built, and most extensive stone-walled terraces. Covers nearly 400 square kilometers. Banaue English 1940 Ang Labanan sa Mayoyao The Battle of Mayoyao Event Event Last battle between the Japanese and combined Filipino and American forces before Gen. Yamashita's surrender in Kiangan, Ifugao.

  6. Old Kiyyangan Village - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Kiyyangan_Village

    Ifugao rice terraces. The time of rice cultivation for the Ifugao people has been the center of a largely contested debate that consequently defines the Ifugao culture, deciding whether the rice terraces are actually over two thousand years old as first accounts argue from Western sources, or were made more recently as argued by local sources ...

  7. Banaue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banaue

    An Ifugao Terraces Commission was created in 1994 and was superseded by the Banaue Rice Terraces task force, which was closed in 2002. UNESCO has listed the Batad Rice Terraces and Bangaan Rice Terraces as a World Heritage Site since 1995, under the designation, Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras. [23]

  8. Terrace (earthworks) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrace_(earthworks)

    Rice terraces in Sa Pa, Vietnam. Rice terraces of the Hani people in Yunnan, China. Rice terrace in the Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. In agriculture, a terrace is a piece of sloped plane that has been cut into a series of successively receding flat surfaces or platforms, which resemble steps, for the purposes of more effective farming.

  9. Archaeology of the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeology_of_the_Philippines

    Banaue Rice Terraces- Initially believed to pre-date the arrival of the Spanish colonizers, recent scholarship has led scholars to conclude that the Banaue rice terraces were constructed in the 1650s, an Indigenous response to Spanish colonial rule in the lowlands. [90]