It is a standard belief that the great terraces of the world (Indonesia, Phillipines, etc) were all built from scratch using very labor intensive methods - the walls were built to full height, soil was moved or hauled in using baskets and back-breaking effort, etc. But how true is that belief? What if there was a low-labor way of building terraces?
I've noticed that grazing animals tend to walk back and forth on the contour lines, and large animals like cows can leave noticeable flat areas. I also believe that instead of building large walls and doing lots of work, one could build a very small wall and let gravity/erosion gradually move the soil. These walls might only grow by a few inches each year, as part of a process of moving the rocks out of fields. Or it could a 3 inch bundle of sticks or bamboo laid along the contour and staked into the ground. With just a little work each year, the soil can be held in place, and terraces will form themselves - rather slowly if the slope is under permanent vegetation, but much faster if the hillside is cultivated and the soil is broken up and exposed to wind and
water.
Is there anything in the
permaculture literature about this?