Aside from certain cultures, particularly in the arid northwest coast of Peru and northern
Andes, pre-colonial
Andean civilizations did not have strong traditions of
market-based
trade. Like Mesoamerican traders, there was a trading class known as in these northern coastal and highland societies. A system of
barter known as is also known to have existed in these coastal societies as a means of exchanging goods and food stuffs between farmers and fisherman. A simple currency, known to archaeologists as
axe-monies, were also present in the area (as well as western
Mesoamerica). By contrast, most highland Andean societies, such as the
Quechua and
Aymara, were organized into
moietal lineage groups, such as in the Quechua case. These lineages internally shared local labor through a system called . The labor system itself rested upon the concept of , or reciprocity, and did not use any form of money as in the case of the coastal Andean traders. All members of the village, the , had to contribute a certain amount of labor (usually one day a week) to a communal project such as the construction of common use buildings, maintenance, herding the communally owned animals or sowing and harvesting communally owned farmland. Fundamentally, it is a concept of "ecological complementarity" mediated through cultural institutions. Some scholars, while accepting the structure and basic nature of the vertical archipelago, have suggested that inter-ethnic trade and barter may have been more important than the model suggests, despite the lack of evidence in the archaeological and ethnohistoric record. Absent the use of trade to access resources, economic transactions were essentially intra-lineage obligations of labor. These lineages required a base level of self-sufficiency to achieve
autarky. In the Andes, a long mountain range with a great variety of
ecozones and resources, the need to access the proper lands for specific crops or animals meant lineages created miniature
colonies or sent seasonal migration (such as
transhumance) in different
ecoregions. As the Andes are a relatively young mountain range, there is especially great variation in rainfall and temperature, which has great importance for agriculture. This is all the more important as only about 2% of the land in the Andes is arable. ==Ecozones==