
Terraced vineyards near Lausanne

The Incan terraces at
Písac are still used today.

Abstract pattern of terrace rice fields in
Yunnan Province, southern
China.

Rice terraces on the island of
Bali, Indonesia
In
agriculture, a 'terrace' is a leveled section of a
hilly cultivated area, designed as a method of
soil conservation to slow or prevent the rapid
surface runoff of
irrigation water. Often such land is formed into multiple terraces, giving a stepped appearance. The human landscapes of
rice cultivation in terraces that follow the natural contours of the escarpments like
contour plowing is a classic feature of the island of
Bali and the
Banaue Rice Terraces in
Benguet,
Philippines. In
Peru, the
Inca made use of otherwise unusable slopes by
drystone walling to create terraces.
This form of land use is prevalent in many countries, and is used for crops requiring a lot of water, such as rice. Terraces are also easier for both mechanical and manual sowing and harvesting than a steep slope would be.
Natural terracing, the result of small-scale erosion, is formed where cattle are grazed for long periods on steep sloping pasture. Sometimes, as a
Glastonbury Tor, the result is regular enough to give an impression of archaeological
artifacts.
From its origins in agriculture the practice of formally
terracing a sloping site evolved in gardening. The
Hanging Gardens of Babylon could have been built on an artificial mountain with stepped terraces like those on a
ziggurat. At the seaside
Villa of the Papyri in
Herculaneum, the villa gardens of Julius Caesar's father-in-law fell away giving pleasant and varied views of the Bay of Naples.
Terraces were also methods of
soil conservation farming for the
Inca. They used a system of
canals and
aqueducts, and made the water flow through dry land and helped them be fertile lands.
The Incas constructed the terraces on the slopes of the Andes mountains. They cut step-like ledges into the mountainside, so they could be used as field, where they planted crops. Using terraces also stopped the rain from washing away the soil. This technique was so successful, it is still used in the Andes mountains.
In old
English, a terrace was also called a
lynch and there is a fine example of a ''Lynch Mill'' in
Lyme Regis, for which the water arrives via a river ducted along a terrace. This set-up was used in steeply hilly areas in the
UK.
also some agricultural areas grew
plum trees.