After eight years as a castaway Garcia joined a Guaraní invasion of the Inca Empire far to the west. The Inca Empire was known to the Guaraní as the "Land without Evil." The Guaraní were familiar with the route, having raided the Andean homelands of the Inca on at least one previous occasion. In 1524, Garcia, the mulatto Pacheco, and possibly a few more Spaniards and Portuguese set out from Santa Catarina to journey westward to what would become the site of
Asunción, Paraguay, passing
Iguazu Falls en route. They were probably the first Europeans to see the waterfall. At the site of Asunción, the Guaraní gathered an army of 2,000 men. The army followed the
Paraguay River northward, crossing the river a few miles south of the future site of
Corumbá, Brazil near the edge of the
Pantanal wetland in the
Itatín region. The Europeans and Guaranís then traveled westward, crossing the semi-arid flatlands of the northern
Gran Chaco of
Bolivia. A large army was probably necessary to cross the Gran Chaco as this was the homeland of the warlike and nomadic
Mbayá, a
Guaycuru speaking people. After crossing the Gran Chaco, the Guaraní army and the Europeans climbed into the
Andes, entering the Inca Empire and reaching
Tarabuco, Bolivia. Tarabuco was a rich outpost of the Incas and the army plundered the riches of the area, mostly silver, cloth, jewelry, and slaves. Garcia and his companions were the first Europeans to enter the Inca Empire, accomplishing this eight years before
Francisco Pizarro. The Incas were not aware that among the invaders were Europeans, a people unknown to them at the time. According to one account, the Incas responded by sending an army of 20,000 men to repel the invaders. The Guaraní army and the Europeans retreated back the way they had come, laden with their plunder. Reaching the Paraguay River, Garcia wanted to resume the attack on the Incas with a larger army. He sent men, either Guaraní or Portuguese (accounts differ), back to his colleagues who had remained on the Atlantic coast with two or three
arrobas, about , of silver to demonstrate the success of the raid and to request reinforcements. He remained behind with most of the plundered goods, but in late 1525, he was murdered by the Guaraní. The reasons for his murder are unknown, but possibly it was for the silver and slaves he had acquired in the raid. Stories of Garcia's expedition and the wealth he acquired encouraged other Spanish explorers, notably
Sebastian Cabot, to explore the region Garcia first visited. ==References==