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Deep in the seasonally flooded savannas of the Amazon basin—especially the Llanos de Moxos (Beni, Bolivia)—Indigenous communities engineered raised-field “mega grids”: thousands of elevated planting platforms linked by canals and causeways, visible from the air, built to farm wetlands without modern drainage. In this video, you’ll see the simple genius behind it: lift the crops above floodwater, use canals to move water, manage moisture, and control risk, and turn a hostile wetland into reliable food production at scale. We’ll break down how these landscapes were organized, why the designs vary by region, and what archaeology and mapping show about just how extensive these systems were. Then we translate the principle into modern takeaways: how “water problems” are often design problems, and why shaping the ground (micro-elevation + channels + maintenance) can outperform expensive tech in the wrong environment. Who this video is for Fans of Indigenous engineering, lost infrastructure, and “how did they do it?” history Anyone interested in resilient agriculture, wetlands, flooding, and food systems Off-grid learners, preppers, homesteaders, permaculture & earthworks enthusiasts Hashtags (English) #IndigenousSystems #AncientEngineering #Amazon #RaisedFields #WetlandFarming #SustainableAgriculture #Resilience #OffGridLiving #Preparedness #HiddenHistory