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Indus Valley Civilisation

The Indus Valley Civilisation[1] (IVC), also known as the Indus Civilisation or the Harappan Civilisation was a Bronze Age civilisation in the northwestern regions of South Asia, lasting from 3300 BCE to 1300 BCE, and in its mature form 2600 BCE to 1900 BCE.[2][a] Together with ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, it was one of three early civilisations of the Near East and South Asia, and of the three, the most widespread. Its sites spanned an area from much of Pakistan, to northeast Afghanistan, and northwestern India.[3][b] The civilisation flourished both in the alluvial plain of the Indus River, which flows through the length of Pakistan, and along a system of perennial monsoon-fed rivers that once coursed in the vicinity of the Ghaggar-Hakra, a seasonal river in northwest India and eastern Pakistan.[2][4]

Indus Valley Civilisation
Alternative namesHarappan civilisation
ancient Indus
Indus civilisation
Geographical rangeBasins of the Indus river, Pakistan and the seasonal Ghaggar-Hakra river, northwest India and eastern Pakistan
PeriodBronze Age South Asia
Datesc.3300 – c.1300 BCE
Type siteHarappa
Major sitesHarappa, Mohenjo-daro, Dholavira, and Rakhigarhi
Preceded byMehrgarh
Followed byPainted Grey Ware culture
Excavated ruins of Mohenjo-daro, Sindh province, Pakistan, showing the Great Bath in the foreground. Mohenjo-daro, on the right bank of the Indus River, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the first site in South Asia to be so declared.
Miniature votive images or toy models from Harappa, c. 2500 BCE. Terracotta figurines indicate the yoking of zebu oxen for pulling a cart and the presence of the chicken, a domesticated jungle fowl.

The term Harappan is sometimes applied to the Indus civilisation after its type site Harappa, the first to be excavated early in the 20th century in what was then the Punjab province of British India and is now Punjab, Pakistan.[5][c] The discovery of Harappa and soon afterwards Mohenjo-daro was the culmination of work that had begun after the founding of the Archaeological Survey of India in the British Raj in 1861.[6] There were earlier and later cultures called Early Harappan and Late Harappan in the same area. The early Harappan cultures were populated from Neolithic cultures, the earliest and best-known of which is Mehrgarh, in Balochistan, Pakistan.[7][8] Harappan civilisation is sometimes called Mature Harappan to distinguish it from the earlier cultures.

The cities of the ancient Indus were noted for their urban planning, baked brick houses, elaborate drainage systems, water supply systems, clusters of large non-residential buildings, and techniques of handicraft and metallurgy.[d] Mohenjo-daro and Harappa very likely grew to contain between 30,000 and 60,000 individuals,[10] and the civilisation may have contained between one and five million individuals during its florescence.[11] A gradual drying of the region during the 3rd millennium BCE may have been the initial stimulus for its urbanisation. Eventually it also reduced the water supply enough to cause the civilisation's demise and to disperse its population to the east.[e]

Although over a thousand Mature Harappan sites have been reported and nearly a hundred excavated,[12][f][14][15] there are five major urban centres:[16][g] (a) Mohenjo-daro in the lower Indus Valley (declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1980 as "Archaeological Ruins at Mohenjodaro"), (b) Harappa in the western Punjab region, (c) Ganeriwala in the Cholistan Desert, (d) Dholavira in western Gujarat (declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2021 as "Dholavira: A Harappan City"), and (e) Rakhigarhi in Haryana.[17][h]

The Harappan language is not directly attested, and its affiliation uncertain as the Indus script has remained undeciphered.[18] A relationship with the Dravidian or Elamo-Dravidian language family is favoured by a section of scholars.[19][20]

Etymology

The Indus civilisation is named after the Indus river system in whose alluvial plains the early sites of the civilisation were identified and excavated.[21][i]

Following a tradition in archaeology, the civilisation is sometimes referred to as the Harappan, after its type site, Harappa, the first site to be excavated in the 1920s; this is notably true of usage employed by the Archaeological Survey of India after India's independence in 1947.[22][j]

The term "Ghaggar-Hakra" figures prominently in modern labels applied to the Indus civilisation on account of a good number of sites having been found along the Ghaggar-Hakra River in northwest India and eastern Pakistan.[23] The terms "Indus-Sarasvati Civilisation" and "Sindhu-Saraswati Civilisation" have also been employed in the literature after a posited identification of the Ghaggar-Hakra with the river Saraswati described in the early chapters of Rigveda, a collection of hymns in archaic Sanskrit composed in the second-millennium BCE.[24][25]

Recent geophysical research suggests that unlike the Sarasvati, whose descriptions in the Rig Veda are those of a snow-fed river, the Ghaggar-Hakra was a system of perennial monsoon-fed rivers, which became seasonal around the time that the civilisation diminished, approximately 4,000 years ago.[4][k]

Extent

 
Major sites and extent of the Indus Valley Civilisation

The Indus Valley Civilisation was roughly contemporary with the other riverine civilisations of the ancient world: Ancient Egypt along the Nile, Mesopotamia in the lands watered by the Euphrates and the Tigris, and China in the drainage basin of the Yellow River and the Yangtze. By the time of its mature phase, the civilisation had spread over an area larger than the others, which included a core of 1,500 kilometres (900 mi) up the alluvial plain of the Indus and its tributaries. In addition, there was a region with disparate flora, fauna, and habitats, up to ten times as large, which had been shaped culturally and economically by the Indus.[26][l]

Around 6500 BCE, agriculture emerged in Balochistan, on the margins of the Indus alluvium.[27][m][28][n] In the following millennia, settled life made inroads into the Indus plains, setting the stage for the growth of rural and urban human settlements.[29][o] The more organized sedentary life, in turn, led to a net increase in the birth rate.[27][p] The large urban centres of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa very likely grew to containing between 30,000 and 60,000 individuals, and during the civilisation's florescence, the population of the subcontinent grew to between 4–6 million people.[27][q] During this period the death rate increased as well, for close living conditions of humans and domesticated animals led to an increase in contagious diseases.[28][r] According to one estimate, the population of the Indus civilisation at its peak may have been between one and five million.[30][s]

The civilisation extended from Pakistan's Balochistan in the west to India's western Uttar Pradesh in the east, from northeastern Afghanistan in the north to India's Gujarat state in the south.[24] The largest number of sites are in Gujarat, Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir states in India,[24] and Sindh, Punjab, and Balochistan provinces in Pakistan.[24] Coastal settlements extended from Sutkagan Dor[31] in Western Baluchistan to Lothal[32] in Gujarat. An Indus Valley site has been found on the Oxus River at Shortugai in northern Afghanistan,[33] in the Gomal River valley in northwestern Pakistan,[34] at Manda, Jammu on the Beas River near Jammu,[35] India, and at Alamgirpur on the Hindon River, only 28 km (17 mi) from Delhi.[36] The southernmost site of the Indus Valley Civilisation is Daimabad in Maharashtra. Indus Valley sites have been found most often on rivers, but also on the ancient seacoast,[37] for example, Balakot (Kot Bala),[38] and on islands, for example, Dholavira.[39]

Discovery and history of excavation

 
Alexander Cunningham, the first director general of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), interpreted a Harappan stamp seal in 1875.
 
R. D. Banerji, an officer of the ASI, visited Mohenjo-daro in 1919–1920, and again in 1922–1923, postulating the site's far-off antiquity.
 
John Marshall, the director-general of the ASI from 1902 to 1928, who oversaw the excavations in Harappa and Mohenjo-daro, shown in a 1906 photograph

"Three other scholars whose names I cannot pass over in silence, are the late Mr. R. D. Banerji, to whom belongs the credit of having discovered, if not Mohenjo-daro itself, at any rate its high antiquity, and his immediate successors in the task of excavation, Messrs. M.S. Vats and K.N. Dikshit. ... no one probably except myself can fully appreciate the difficulties and hardships which they had to face in the three first seasons at Mohenjo-daro"

 — From, John Marshall (ed), Mohenjo-daro and the Indus Civilization, London: Arthur Probsthain, 1931.[40]

The first modern accounts of the ruins of the Indus civilisation are those of Charles Masson, a deserter from the East India Company's army.[41] In 1829, Masson traveled through the princely state of Punjab, gathering useful intelligence for the Company in return for a promise of clemency.[41] An aspect of this arrangement was the additional requirement to hand over to the Company any historical artifacts acquired during his travels. Masson, who had versed himself in the classics, especially in the military campaigns of Alexander the Great, chose for his wanderings some of the same towns that had featured in Alexander's campaigns, and whose archaeological sites had been noted by the campaign's chroniclers.[41] Masson's major archaeological discovery in the Punjab was Harappa, a metropolis of the Indus civilisation in the valley of Indus's tributary, the Ravi river. Masson made copious notes and illustrations of Harappa's rich historical artifacts, many lying half-buried. In 1842, Masson included his observations of Harappa in the book Narrative of Various Journeys in Baluchistan, Afghanistan, and the Punjab. He dated the Harappa ruins to a period of recorded history, erroneously mistaking it to have been described earlier during Alexander's campaign.[41] Masson was impressed by the site's extraordinary size and by several large mounds formed from long-existing erosion.[41][t]

Two years later, the Company contracted Alexander Burnes to sail up the Indus to assess the feasibility of water travel for its army.[41] Burnes, who also stopped in Harappa, noted the baked bricks employed in the site's ancient masonry, but noted also the haphazard plundering of these bricks by the local population.[41]

Despite these reports, Harappa was raided even more perilously for its bricks after the British annexation of the Punjab in 1848–49. A considerable number were carted away as track ballast for the railway lines being laid in the Punjab.[43] Nearly 160 km (100 mi) of railway track between Multan and Lahore, laid in the mid 1850s, was supported by Harappan bricks.[43]

In 1861, three years after the dissolution of the East India Company and the establishment of Crown rule in India, archaeology on the subcontinent became more formally organised with the founding of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).[44] Alexander Cunningham, the Survey's first director-general, who had visited Harappa in 1853 and had noted the imposing brick walls, visited again to carry out a survey, but this time of a site whose entire upper layer had been stripped in the interim.[44][45] Although his original goal of demonstrating Harappa to be a lost Buddhist city mentioned in the seventh century CE travels of the Chinese visitor, Xuanzang, proved elusive,[45] Cunningham did publish his findings in 1875.[46] For the first time, he interpreted a Harappan stamp seal, with its unknown script, which he concluded to be of an origin foreign to India.[46][47]

Archaeological work in Harappa thereafter lagged until a new viceroy of India, Lord Curzon, pushed through the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act 1904, and appointed John Marshall to lead the ASI.[48] Several years later, Hiranand Sastri, who had been assigned by Marshall to survey Harappa, reported it to be of non-Buddhist origin, and by implication more ancient.[48] Expropriating Harappa for the ASI under the Act, Marshall directed ASI archaeologist Daya Ram Sahni to excavate the site's two mounds.[48]

Farther south, along the main stem of the Indus in Sind province, the largely undisturbed site of Mohenjo-daro had attracted notice.[48] Marshall deputed a succession of ASI officers to survey the site. These included D. R. Bhandarkar (1911), R. D. Banerji (1919, 1922–1923), and M. S. Vats (1924).[49] In 1923, on his second visit to Mohenjo-daro, Baneriji wrote to Marshall about the site, postulating an origin in "remote antiquity," and noting a congruence of some of its artifacts with those of Harappa.[50] Later in 1923, Vats, also in correspondence with Marshall, noted the same more specifically about the seals and the script found at both sites.[50] On the weight of these opinions, Marshall ordered crucial data from the two sites to be brought to one location and invited Banerji and Sahni to a joint discussion.[51] By 1924, Marshall had become convinced of the significance of the finds, and on 24 September 1924, made a tentative but conspicuous public intimation in the Illustrated London News:[21]

"Not often has it been given to archaeologists, as it was given to Schliemann at Tiryns and Mycenae, or to Stein in the deserts of Turkestan, to light upon the remains of a long forgotten civilisation. It looks, however, at this moment, as if we were on the threshold of such a discovery in the plains of the Indus."

In the next issue, a week later, the British Assyriologist Archibald Sayce was able to point to very similar seals found in Bronze Age levels in Mesopotamia and Iran, giving the first strong indication of their date; confirmations from other archaeologists followed.[52] Systematic excavations began in Mohenjo-daro in 1924–25 with that of K. N. Dikshit, continuing with those of H. Hargreaves (1925–1926), and Ernest J. H. Mackay (1927–1931).[49] By 1931, much of Mohenjo-daro had been excavated, but occasional excavations continued, such as the one led by Mortimer Wheeler, a new director-general of the ASI appointed in 1944, and including Ahmad Hasan Dani.[53]

After the partition of India in 1947, when most excavated sites of the Indus Valley Civilisation lay in territory awarded to Pakistan, the Archaeological Survey of India, its area of authority reduced, carried out large numbers of surveys and excavations along the Ghaggar-Hakra system in India.[54][u] Some speculated that the Ghaggar-Hakra system might yield more sites than the Indus river basin.[55] According to archaeologist Ratnagar, many Ghaggar-Hakra sites in India and Indus Valley sites in Pakistan are actually those of local cultures; some sites display contact with Harappan civilisation, but only a few are fully developed Harappan ones.[56] As of 1977, about 90% of the Indus script seals and inscribed objects discovered were found at sites in Pakistan along the Indus river, while other sites accounts only for the remaining 10%.[v][57][58] By 2002, over 1,000 Mature Harappan cities and settlements had been reported, of which just under a hundred had been excavated,[13][14][15][59] mainly in the general region of the Indus and Ghaggar-Hakra rivers and their tributaries; however, there are only five major urban sites: Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Dholavira, Ganeriwala and Rakhigarhi.[59] As of 2008, about 616 sites have been reported in India,[24] whereas 406 sites have been reported in Pakistan.[24]

Unlike India, in which after 1947, the ASI attempted to "Indianise" archaeological work in keeping with the new nation's goals of national unity and historical continuity, in Pakistan the national imperative was the promotion of Islamic heritage, and consequently archaeological work on early sites was left to foreign archaeologists.[60] After the partition, Mortimer Wheeler, the Director of ASI from 1944, oversaw the establishment of archaeological institutions in Pakistan, later joining a UNESCO effort tasked to conserve the site at Mohenjo-daro.[61] Other international efforts at Mohenjo-daro and Harappa have included the German Aachen Research Project Mohenjo-daro, the Italian Mission to Mohenjo-daro, and the US Harappa Archaeological Research Project (HARP) founded by George F. Dales.[62] Following a chance flash flood which exposed a portion of an archaeological site at the foot of the Bolan Pass in Balochistan, excavations were carried out in Mehrgarh by French archaeologist Jean-François Jarrige and his team in the early 1970s.[63]

Chronology

The cities of the ancient Indus had "social hierarchies, their writing system, their large planned cities and their long-distance trade [which] mark them to archaeologists as a full-fledged 'civilisation.'"[64] The mature phase of the Harappan civilisation lasted from c. 2600–1900 BCE. With the inclusion of the predecessor and successor cultures – Early Harappan and Late Harappan, respectively – the entire Indus Valley Civilisation may be taken to have lasted from the 33rd to the 14th centuries BCE. It is part of the Indus Valley Tradition, which also includes the pre-Harappan occupation of Mehrgarh, the earliest farming site of the Indus Valley.[8][65]

Several periodisations are employed for the IVC.[8][65] The most commonly used classifies the Indus Valley Civilisation into Early, Mature and Late Harappan Phase.[66] An alternative approach by Shaffer divides the broader Indus Valley Tradition into four eras, the pre-Harappan "Early Food Producing Era", and the Regionalisation, Integration, and Localisation eras, which correspond roughly with the Early Harappan, Mature Harappan, and Late Harappan phases.[7][67]

Dates (BCE) Main phase Mehrgarh phases Harappan phases Post-Harappan phases Era
7000–5500 Pre-Harappan Mehrgarh I and Bhirrana
(aceramic Neolithic)
Early Food Producing Era
5500–3300 Pre-Harappan/Early Harappan[68] Mehrgarh II–VI
(ceramic Neolithic)
Regionalisation Era
c. 4000–2500/2300 (Shaffer)[69]
c. 5000–3200 (Coningham & Young)[70]
3300–2800 Early Harappan[68]
c. 3300–2800 (Mughal)[71][68][72]
c. 5000–2800 (Kenoyer)
[68]
Harappan 1
(Ravi Phase; Hakra Ware)
2800–2600 Mehrgarh VII Harappan 2
(Kot Diji Phase,
Nausharo I)
2600–2450 Mature Harappan
(Indus Valley Civilisation)
Harappan 3A (Nausharo II) Integration Era
2450–2200 Harappan 3B
2200–1900 Harappan 3C
1900–1700 Late Harappan Harappan 4 Cemetery H[73]
Ochre Coloured Pottery[73]
Localisation Era
1700–1300 Harappan 5
1300–600 Post-Harappan
Iron Age India
Painted Grey Ware (1200–600)
Vedic period (c. 1500–500)
Regionalisation
c. 1200–300 (Kenoyer)[68]
c. 1500[74]–600 (Coningham & Young)[75]
600–300 Northern Black Polished Ware (Iron Age) (700–200)
Second urbanisation (c. 500–200)
Integration[75]

Pre-Harappan era: Mehrgarh

Mehrgarh is a Neolithic (7000 BCE to c. 2500 BCE) mountain site in the Balochistan province of Pakistan,[76] which gave new insights on the emergence of the Indus Valley Civilisation.[64][w] Mehrgarh is one of the earliest sites with evidence of farming and herding in South Asia.[77][78] Mehrgarh was influenced by the Near Eastern Neolithic,[79] with similarities between "domesticated wheat varieties, early phases of farming, pottery, other archaeological artefacts, some domesticated plants and herd animals."[80][x]

Jean-Francois Jarrige argues for an independent origin of Mehrgarh. Jarrige notes "the assumption that farming economy was introduced full-fledged from Near-East to South Asia,"[81][x][y][z] and the similarities between Neolithic sites from eastern Mesopotamia and the western Indus valley, which are evidence of a "cultural continuum" between those sites. But given the originality of Mehrgarh, Jarrige concludes that Mehrgarh has an earlier local background, and is not a "'backwater' of the Neolithic culture of the Near East".[81]

Lukacs and Hemphill suggest an initial local development of Mehrgarh, with a continuity in cultural development but a change in population. According to Lukacs and Hemphill, while there is a strong continuity between the neolithic and chalcolithic (Copper Age) cultures of Mehrgarh, dental evidence shows that the chalcolithic population did not descend from the neolithic population of Mehrgarh,[95] which "suggests moderate levels of gene flow."[95][aa] Mascarenhas et al. (2015) note that "new, possibly West Asian, body types are reported from the graves of Mehrgarh beginning in the Togau phase (3800 BCE)."[96]

Gallego Romero et al. (2011) state that their research on lactose tolerance in India suggests that "the west Eurasian genetic contribution identified by Reich et al. (2009) principally reflects gene flow from Iran and the Middle East."[97] They further note that "[t]he earliest evidence of cattle herding in south Asia comes from the Indus River Valley site of Mehrgarh and is dated to 7,000 YBP."[97][ab]

Early Harappan

 
Early Harappan Period, c. 3300–2600 BCE
 
Terracotta boat in the shape of a bull, and female figurines. Kot Diji period (c. 2800–2600 BC).

The Early Harappan Ravi Phase, named after the nearby Ravi River, lasted from c. 3300 BCE until 2800 BCE. It started when farmers from the mountains gradually moved between their mountain homes and the lowland river valleys,[99] and is related to the Hakra Phase, identified in the Ghaggar-Hakra River Valley to the west, and predates the Kot Diji Phase (2800–2600 BCE, Harappan 2), named after a site in northern Sindh, Pakistan, near Mohenjo-daro. The earliest examples of the Indus script date to the 3rd millennium BCE.[100][101]

The mature phase of earlier village cultures is represented by Rehman Dheri and Amri in Pakistan.[102] Kot Diji represents the phase leading up to Mature Harappan, with the citadel representing centralised authority and an increasingly urban quality of life. Another town of this stage was found at Kalibangan in India on the Hakra River.[103]

Trade networks linked this culture with related regional cultures and distant sources of raw materials, including lapis lazuli and other materials for bead-making. By this time, villagers had domesticated numerous crops, including peas, sesame seeds, dates, and cotton, as well as animals, including the water buffalo. Early Harappan communities turned to large urban centres by 2600 BCE, from where the mature Harappan phase started. The latest research shows that Indus Valley people migrated from villages to cities.[104][105]

The final stages of the Early Harappan period are characterised by the building of large walled settlements, the expansion of trade networks, and the increasing integration of regional communities into a "relatively uniform" material culture in terms of pottery styles, ornaments, and stamp seals with Indus script, leading into the transition to the Mature Harappan phase.[106]

Mature Harappan

 
Mature Harappan Period, c. 2600–1900 BCE
Mature Harappan
 
View of Granary and Great Hall on Mound F in Harappa
 
Archaeological remains of washroom drainage system at Lothal
 
Dholavira in Gujarat, India, is one of the largest cities of Indus Valley civilisation, with stepwell steps to reach the water level in artificially constructed reservoirs.[107]

According to Giosan et al. (2012), the slow southward migration of the monsoons across Asia initially allowed the Indus Valley villages to develop by taming the floods of the Indus and its tributaries. Flood-supported farming led to large agricultural surpluses, which in turn supported the development of cities. The IVC residents did not develop irrigation capabilities, relying mainly on the seasonal monsoons leading to summer floods.[4] Brooke further notes that the development of advanced cities coincides with a reduction in rainfall, which may have triggered a reorganisation into larger urban centres.[108][e]

According to J.G. Shaffer and D.A. Lichtenstein,[109] the Mature Harappan civilisation was "a fusion of the Bagor, Hakra, and Kot Diji traditions or 'ethnic groups' in the Ghaggar-Hakra valley on the borders of India and Pakistan".[110]

Also, according to a more recent summary by Maisels (2003), "The Harappan oecumene formed from a Kot Dijian/Amri-Nal synthesis". He also says that, in the development of complexity, the site of Mohenjo-daro has priority, along with the Hakra-Ghaggar cluster of sites, "where Hakra wares actually precede the Kot Diji related material". He sees these areas as "catalytic in producing the fusion from Hakra, Kot Dijian and Amri-Nal cultural elements that resulted in the gestalt we recognize as Early Harappan (Early Indus)."[111]

By 2600 BCE, the Early Harappan communities turned into large urban centres. Such urban centres include Harappa, Ganeriwala, Mohenjo-daro in modern-day Pakistan, and Dholavira, Kalibangan, Rakhigarhi, Rupar, and Lothal in modern-day India.[112] In total, more than 1,000 cities and settlements have been found, mainly in the general region of the Indus and Ghaggar-Hakra Rivers and their tributaries.[13]

Cities

A sophisticated and technologically advanced urban culture is evident in the Indus Valley Civilisation, making them the first urban centre in the region. The quality of municipal town planning suggests the knowledge of urban planning and efficient municipal governments which placed a high priority on hygiene, or, alternatively, accessibility to the means of religious ritual.[113]

As seen in Harappa, Mohenjo-daro and the recently partially excavated Rakhigarhi, this urban plan included the world's first known urban sanitation systems. Within the city, individual homes or groups of homes obtained water from wells. From a room that appears to have been set aside for bathing, waste water was directed to covered drains, which lined the major streets. Houses opened only to inner courtyards and smaller lanes. The housebuilding in some villages in the region still resembles in some respects the housebuilding of the Harappans.[ac]

The ancient Indus systems of sewerage and drainage that were developed and used in cities throughout the Indus region were far more advanced than any found in contemporary urban sites in the Middle East and even more efficient than those in many areas of Pakistan and India today. The advanced architecture of the Harappans is shown by their impressive dockyards, granaries, warehouses, brick platforms, and protective walls. The massive walls of Indus cities most likely protected the Harappans from floods and may have dissuaded military conflicts.[115]

The purpose of the citadel remains debated. In sharp contrast to this civilisation's contemporaries, Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt, no large monumental structures were built. There is no conclusive evidence of palaces or temples.[116] Some structures are thought to have been granaries. Found at one city is an enormous well-built bath (the "Great Bath"), which may have been a public bath. Although the citadels were walled, it is far from clear that these structures were defensive.

Most city dwellers appear to have been traders or artisans, who lived with others pursuing the same occupation in well-defined neighbourhoods. Materials from distant regions were used in the cities for constructing seals, beads and other objects. Among the artefacts discovered were beautiful glazed faïence beads. Steatite seals have images of animals, people (perhaps gods), and other types of inscriptions, including the yet un-deciphered writing system of the Indus Valley Civilisation. Some of the seals were used to stamp clay on trade goods.

Although some houses were larger than others, Indus civilisation cities were remarkable for their apparent, if relative, egalitarianism. All the houses had access to water and drainage facilities. This gives the impression of a society with relatively low wealth concentration.[117]

Authority and governance

Archaeological records provide no immediate answers for a centre of power or for depictions of people in power in Harappan society. But, there are indications of complex decisions being taken and implemented. For instance, the majority of the cities were constructed in a highly uniform and well-planned grid pattern, suggesting they were planned by a central authority; extraordinary uniformity of Harappan artefacts as evident in pottery, seals, weights and bricks;[118] presence of public facilities and monumental architecture;[119] heterogeneity in the mortuary symbolism and in grave goods (items included in burials).[citation needed]

These are some major theories:[citation needed]

  • There was a single state, given the similarity in artefacts, the evidence for planned settlements, the standardised ratio of brick size, and the establishment of settlements near sources of raw material.
  • There was no single ruler but several cities like Mohenjo-daro had a separate ruler, Harappa another, and so forth.
  • Society in the Indus Valley Civilisation was egalitarian.[120]

Metallurgy

Harappans evolved some new techniques in metallurgy and produced copper, bronze, lead, and tin.[citation needed]

A touchstone bearing gold streaks was found in Banawali, which was probably used for testing the purity of gold (such a technique is still used in some parts of India).[110]

Metrology

 
Harappan weights found in the Indus Valley, (National Museum, New Delhi)[121]

The people of the Indus civilisation achieved great accuracy in measuring length, mass, and time. They were among the first to develop a system of uniform weights and measures.[dubious ] A comparison of available objects indicates large scale variation across the Indus territories. Their smallest division, which is marked on an ivory scale found in Lothal in Gujarat, was approximately 1.704 mm, the smallest division ever recorded on a scale of the Bronze Age.[citation needed] Harappan engineers followed the decimal division of measurement for all practical purposes, including the measurement of mass as revealed by their hexahedron weights.[citation needed]

These chert weights were in a ratio of 5:2:1 with weights of 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, and 500 units, with each unit weighing approximately 28 grams, similar to the English Imperial ounce or Greek uncia, and smaller objects were weighed in similar ratios with the units of 0.871 . However, as in other cultures, actual weights were not uniform throughout the area. The weights and measures later used in Kautilya's Arthashastra (4th century BCE) are the same as those used in Lothal.[122]

Arts and crafts

Various sculptures, seals, bronze vessels, pottery, gold jewellery, and anatomically detailed figurines in terracotta, bronze, and steatite have been found at excavation sites.[123] The Harappans also made various toys and games, among them cubical dice (with one to six holes on the faces), which were found in sites like Mohenjo-daro.[124]

The terracotta figurines included cows, bears, monkeys, and dogs. The animal depicted on a majority of seals at sites of the mature period has not been clearly identified. Part bull, part zebra, with a majestic horn, it has been a source of speculation. As yet, there is insufficient evidence to substantiate claims that the image had religious or cultic significance, but the prevalence of the image raises the question of whether or not the animals in images of the IVC are religious symbols.[125]

Many crafts including, "shell working, ceramics, and agate and glazed steatite bead making" were practised and the pieces were used in the making of necklaces, bangles, and other ornaments from all phases of Harappan culture. Some of these crafts are still practised in the subcontinent today.[119] Some make-up and toiletry items (a special kind of combs (kakai), the use of collyrium and a special three-in-one toiletry gadget) that were found in Harappan contexts still have similar counterparts in modern India.[126] Terracotta female figurines were found (c. 2800–2600 BCE) which had red colour applied to the "manga" (line of partition of the hair).[126]

The finds from Mohenjo-daro were initially deposited in the Lahore Museum, but later moved to the ASI headquarters at New Delhi, where a new "Central Imperial Museum" was being planned for the new capital of the British Raj, in which at least a selection would be displayed. It became apparent that Indian independence was approaching, but the Partition of India was not anticipated until late in the process. The new Pakistani authorities requested the return of the Mohenjo-daro pieces excavated on their territory, but the Indian authorities refused. Eventually an agreement was reached, whereby the finds, totalling some 12,000 objects (most sherds of pottery), were split equally between the countries; in some cases this was taken very literally, with some necklaces and girdles having their beads separated into two piles. In the case of the "two most celebrated sculpted figures", Pakistan asked for and received the so-called Priest-King figure, while India retained the much smaller Dancing Girl.[127]

Though written considerably later, the arts treatise Natya Shastra (c. 200 BCE – 200 CE) classifies musical instruments into four groups based on their means of acoustical production—strings, membranes, solid materials and air—and it is probable that such instruments had existed since the IVC.[128] Archeological evidence indicates the use of simple rattles and vessel flutes, while iconographical evidence suggests early harps and drums were also used.[129] An ideogram in the IVC contains the earliest known depiction of an arched harp, dated sometime before 1800 BCE.[130]

Human statuettes

A handful of realistic statuettes have been found at IVC sites, of which much the most famous is the lost-wax casting bronze statuette of a slender-limbed Dancing Girl adorned with bangles, found in Mohenjo-daro. Two other realistic incomplete statuettes have been found in Harappa in proper stratified excavations, which display near-Classical treatment of the human shape: the statuette of a dancer who seems to be male, and the Hapappa Torso, a red jasper male torso, both now in the Delhi National Museum. Sir John Marshall reacted with surprise when he saw these two statuettes from Harappa:[131]

When I first saw them I found it difficult to believe that they were prehistoric; they seemed to completely upset all established ideas about early art, and culture. Modelling such as this was unknown in the ancient world up to the Hellenistic age of Greece, and I thought, therefore, that some mistake must surely have been made; that these figures had found their way into levels some 3000 years older than those to which they properly belonged ... Now, in these statuettes, it is just this anatomical truth which is so startling; that makes us wonder whether, in this all-important matter, Greek artistry could possibly have been anticipated by the sculptors of a far-off age on the banks of the Indus.[131]

These statuettes remain controversial, due to their advanced style in representing the human body. Regarding the red jasper torso, the discoverer, Vats, claims a Harappan date, but Marshall considered this statuette is probably historical, dating to the Gupta period, comparing it to the much later Lohanipur torso.[132] A second rather similar grey stone torso of a dancing male was also found about 150 meters away in a secure Mature Harappan stratum. Overall, anthropologist Gregory Possehl tends to consider that these statuettes probably form the pinnacle of Indus art during the Mature Harappan period.[133]

Seals

 
Stamp seals and (right) impressions, some of them with Indus script; probably made of steatite; British Museum (London)

Thousands of steatite seals have been recovered, and their physical character is fairly consistent. In size they range from squares of side 2 to 4 cm (34 to 1+12 in). In most cases they have a pierced boss at the back to accommodate a cord for handling or for use as personal adornment. In addition a large number of sealings have survived, of which only a few can be matched to the seals. The great majority of examples of the Indus script are short groups of signs on seals.[134]

Seals have been found at Mohenjo-daro depicting a figure standing on its head, and another, on the Pashupati seal, sitting cross-legged in what some[who?] call a yoga-like pose (see image, the so-called Pashupati, below). This figure has been variously identified. Sir John Marshall identified a resemblance to the Hindu god, Shiva.[135]

A human deity with the horns, hooves and tail of a bull also appears in the seals, in particular in a fighting scene with a horned tiger-like beast. This deity has been compared to the Mesopotamian bull-man Enkidu.[136][137][138] Several seals also show a man fighting two lions or tigers, a "Master of Animals" motif common to civilisations in Western and South Asia.[138][139]

Trade and transportation

 
Archaeological discoveries suggest that trade routes between Mesopotamia and the Indus were active during the 3rd millennium BCE, leading to the development of Indus–Mesopotamia relations.[140]
 
Boat with direction-finding birds to find land.[141][142] Model of Mohenjo-daro tablet, 2500–1750 BCE.(National Museum, New Delhi).[143][144] Flat-bottomed river row-boats appear in two Indus seals, but their seaworthiness is debatable.[145]

IVC may have had bullock carts identical to those seen throughout South Asia today, as well as boats. Most of these boats were probably small, flat-bottomed craft, perhaps driven by sail, similar to those one can see on the Indus River today;. An extensive canal network, used for irrigation, has however also been discovered by H.-P. Francfort.[146]

During 4300–3200 BCE of the chalcolithic period (copper age), the Indus Valley Civilisation area shows ceramic similarities with southern Turkmenistan and northern Iran which suggest considerable mobility and trade. During the Early Harappan period (about 3200–2600 BCE), similarities in pottery, seals, figurines, ornaments, etc. document intensive caravan trade with Central Asia and the Iranian plateau.[147]

Judging from the dispersal of Indus civilisation artefacts, the trade networks economically integrated a huge area, including portions of Afghanistan, the coastal regions of Persia, northern and western India, and Mesopotamia, leading to the development of Indus-Mesopotamia relations. Studies of tooth enamel from individuals buried at Harappa suggest that some residents had migrated to the city from beyond the Indus Valley.[148] Ancient DNA studies of graves at Bronze Age sites at Gonur Depe, Turkmenistan, and Shahr-e Sukhteh, Iran, have identified 11 individuals of South Asian descent, who are presumed to be of mature Indus Valley origin.[149]

There was an extensive maritime trade network operating between the Harappan and Mesopotamian civilisations as early as the middle Harappan Phase, with much commerce being handled by "middlemen merchants from Dilmun" (modern Bahrain, Eastern Arabia and Failaka located in the Persian Gulf).[150] Such long-distance sea trade became feasible with the development of plank-built watercraft, equipped with a single central mast supporting a sail of woven rushes or cloth.[151]

However, the evidence of sea-borne trade involving the Harappan civilisation is not firm. In their book Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan archaeologists Bridget Allchin and Raymond Allchin write:

... (p. 173) the settlement at Lothal ... along the east side was a brick basin. It is claimed by its excavator to have been a dockyard, connected by channels to a neighbouring estuary. ... On its edge the excavator discovered several heavily-pierced stones, similar to modern anchor stones employed by traditional seafaring communities of Western India. This interpretation, however, has been challenged, and indeed the published levels of the basin and its entrance relative to the modern sea level seem to argue against it. Leshnik has cogently suggested that it was a tank for the reception of sweet water, channelled from higher ground inland to an area where the local water supplies were anciently, as still today, saline. We regard either interpretation as still unproven, but favour the latter. ... (p. 188–189) The discussion of trade focuses attention upon methods of transport. Several representations of ships are found on seals and graffiti at Harappa, Mohenjo-daro (Figs. 7.15–7.16], etc, and a terracotta model of a ship, with a stick impressed socket for the mast and eyeholes for fixing rigging comes from Lothal. We have already seen above that the great brick tank, interpreted by Rao as a dock at Lothal, cannot yet be certainly identified. The evidence of sea trade and contact during the Harappan period is largely circumstantial, or derived from inferences from the Mesopotamian texts, as detailed above. (Figure 7. 15 had caption: Mohenjo-daro: representation of ship on a stone seal (length 4.3 cm) (after Mackay). Figure 7.16 Mohenjo-daro: representation of ship on terracotta amulet (length 4.5 cm) after Dales)

And Daniel T. Potts writes:

It is generally assumed that most trade between the Indus Valley (ancient Meluhha?) and western neighbors proceeded up the Persian Gulf rather than overland. Although there is no incontrovertible proof that this was indeed the case, the distribution of Indus-type artifacts on the Oman peninsula, on Bahrain and in southern Mesopotamia makes it plausible that a series of maritime stages linked the Indus Valley and the Gulf region. If this is accepted, then the presence of etched carnelian beads, a Harappan-style cubical stone weight, and a Harappan-style cylinder seal at Susa (Amiet 1986a, Figs. 92-94) may be evidence of maritime trade between Susa and the Indus Valley in the late 3rd millennium BCE. On the other hand, given that similar finds, particularly etched carnelian beads, are attested at landlocked sites including Tepe Hissar (Tappe Heṣār), Shah Tepe (Šāh-Tappe), Kalleh Nisar (Kalla Nisār), Jalalabad (Jalālābād), Marlik (Mārlik) and Tepe Yahya (Tappe Yaḥyā) (Possehl 1996, pp. 153-54), other mechanisms, including overland traffic by peddlers or caravans, may account for their presence at Susa.[152]

In the 1980s, important archaeological discoveries were made at Ras al-Jinz (Oman), demonstrating maritime Indus Valley connections with the Arabian Peninsula.[151][153][154]

Agriculture

According to Gangal et al. (2014), there is strong archeological and geographical evidence that neolithic farming spread from the Near East into north-west India, but there is also "good evidence for the local domestication of barley and the zebu cattle at Mehrgarh."[79][ad]

According to Jean-Francois Jarrige, farming had an independent local origin at Mehrgarh, which he argues is not merely a "'backwater' of the Neolithic culture of the Near East", despite similarities between Neolithic sites from eastern Mesopotamia and the western Indus valley which are evidence of a "cultural continuum" between those sites.[81] Archaeologist Jim G. Shaffer writes that the Mehrgarh site "demonstrates that food production was an indigenous South Asian phenomenon" and that the data support interpretation of "the prehistoric urbanisation and complex social organisation in South Asia as based on indigenous, but not isolated, cultural developments".[155]

Jarrige notes that the people of Mehrgarh used domesticated wheats and barley,[156] while Shaffer and Liechtenstein note that the major cultivated cereal crop was naked six-row barley, a crop derived from two-row barley.[157] Gangal agrees that "Neolithic domesticated crops in Mehrgarh include more than 90% barley," noting that "there is good evidence for the local domestication of barley." Yet, Gangal also notes that the crop also included "a small amount of wheat," which "are suggested to be of Near-Eastern origin, as the modern distribution of wild varieties of wheat is limited to Northern Levant and Southern Turkey."[79][ae]

The cattle that are often portrayed on Indus seals are humped Indian aurochs (Bos primigenius namadicus), which are similar to Zebu cattle. Zebu cattle is still common in India, and in Africa. It is different from the European cattle (Bos primigenius taurus), and are believed to have been independently domesticated on the Indian subcontinent, probably in the Baluchistan region of Pakistan.[158][79][ad]

Research by J. Bates et al. (2016) confirms that Indus populations were the earliest people to use complex multi-cropping strategies across both seasons, growing foods during summer (rice, millets and beans) and winter (wheat, barley and pulses), which required different watering regimes.[159] Bates et al. (2016) also found evidence for an entirely separate domestication process of rice in ancient South Asia, based around the wild species Oryza nivara. This led to the local development of a mix of "wetland" and "dryland" agriculture of local Oryza sativa indica rice agriculture, before the truly "wetland" rice Oryza sativa japonica arrived around 2000 BCE.[160]

Food

According to archeological finds, Indus valley civilization had dominance of meat diet of animals such as cattle, buffalo, goat, pig and chicken.[161][162] Remnants of dairy products were also discovered. According to Akshyeta Suryanarayan et al.,[af] available evidence indicates culinary practices to be common over the region; food-constituents were dairy products (in low proportion), ruminant carcass meat, and either non-ruminant adipose fats, plants, or mixtures of these products.[163] The dietary pattern remained same throughout the decline.[163]

Seven food-balls (“laddus”) were found in intact form, along with two figurines of bulls and a hand-held copper adze, during excavations in 2017 from western Rajasthan.[164] Dated to about 2600 BCE, they were likely composed of legumes, primarily mung, and cereals.[164] The authors speculated the food-balls to be of a ritualistic significance, given the founds of bull figurines, adze and a seal in immediate vicinity.[164][165]

Language

It has often been suggested that the bearers of the IVC corresponded to proto-Dravidians linguistically, the break-up of proto-Dravidian corresponding to the break-up of the Late Harappan culture.[166] Finnish Indologist Asko Parpola concludes that the uniformity of the Indus inscriptions precludes any possibility of widely different languages being used, and that an early form of Dravidian language must have been the language of the Indus people.[167] Today, the Dravidian language family is concentrated mostly in southern India and northern and eastern Sri Lanka, but pockets of it still remain throughout the rest of India and Pakistan (the Brahui language), which lends credence to the theory.

According to Heggarty and Renfrew, Dravidian languages may have spread into the Indian subcontinent with the spread of farming.[168] According to David McAlpin, the Dravidian languages were brought to India by immigration into India from Elam.[ag] In earlier publications, Renfrew also stated that proto-Dravidian was brought to India by farmers from the Iranian part of the Fertile Crescent,[169][170][171][ah] but more recently Heggarty and Renfrew note that "a great deal remains to be done in elucidating the prehistory of Dravidian." They also note that "McAlpin's analysis of the language data, and thus his claims, remain far from orthodoxy."[168] Heggarty and Renfrew conclude that several scenarios are compatible with the data, and that "the linguistic jury is still very much out."[168][aj] In a 2021 study, Bahata Ansumali Mukhopadhyay presented a linguistic analysis to posit a Proto-Dravidian presence in the ancient Indus area, using Dravidian root words for tooth, toothbrush and elephant in various contemporary ancient civilisations.[176]

Possible writing system

 
Ten Indus characters from the northern gate of Dholavira, dubbed the Dholavira signboard

Between 400 and as many as 600 distinct Indus symbols[177] have been found on stamp seals, small tablets, ceramic pots and more than a dozen other materials, including a "signboard" that apparently once hung over the gate of the inner citadel of the Indus city of Dholavira. Typical Indus inscriptions are around five characters in length,[178] most of which (aside from the Dholavira "signboard") are tiny; the longest on any single object (inscribed on a copper plate[179]) has a length of 34 symbols.

While the Indus Valley Civilisation is generally characterised as a literate society on the evidence of these inscriptions, this description has been challenged by Farmer, Sproat, and Witzel (2004)[180] who argue that the Indus system did not encode language, but was instead similar to a variety of non-linguistic sign systems used extensively in the Near East and other societies, to symbolise families, clans, gods, and religious concepts. Others have claimed on occasion that the symbols were exclusively used for economic transactions, but this claim leaves unexplained the appearance of Indus symbols on many ritual objects, many of which were mass-produced in moulds. No parallels to these mass-produced inscriptions are known in any other early ancient civilisations.[181]

In a 2009 study by P.N. Rao et al. published in Science, computer scientists, comparing the pattern of symbols to various linguistic scripts and non-linguistic systems, including DNA and a computer programming language, found that the Indus script's pattern is closer to that of spoken words, supporting the hypothesis that it codes for an as-yet-unknown language.[182][183]

Farmer, Sproat, and Witzel have disputed this finding, pointing out that Rao et al. did not actually compare the Indus signs with "real-world non-linguistic systems" but rather with "two wholly artificial systems invented by the authors, one consisting of 200,000 randomly ordered signs and another of 200,000 fully ordered signs, that they spuriously claim represent the structures of all real-world non-linguistic sign systems".[184] Farmer et al. have also demonstrated that a comparison of a non-linguistic system like medieval heraldic signs with natural languages yields results similar to those that Rao et al. obtained with Indus signs. They conclude that the method used by Rao et al. cannot distinguish linguistic systems from non-linguistic ones.[185]

The messages on the seals have proved to be too short to be decoded by a computer. Each seal has a distinctive combination of symbols and there are too few examples of each sequence to provide a sufficient context. The symbols that accompany the images vary from seal to seal, making it impossible to derive a meaning for the symbols from the images. There have, nonetheless, been a number of interpretations offered for the meaning of the seals. These interpretations have been marked by ambiguity and subjectivity.[185]: 69 

Photos of many of the thousands of extant inscriptions are published in the Corpus of Indus Seals and Inscriptions (1987, 1991, 2010), edited by Asko Parpola and his colleagues. The most recent volume republished photos taken in the 1920s and 1930s of hundreds of lost or stolen inscriptions, along with many discovered in the last few decades; formerly, researchers had to supplement the materials in the Corpus by study of the tiny photos in the excavation reports of Marshall (1931), MacKay (1938, 1943), Wheeler (1947), or reproductions in more recent scattered sources.[citation needed]

Religion

 
The Pashupati seal, showing a seated figure surrounded by animals
 
Swastika seals of Indus Valley Civilisation in British Museum

The religion and belief system of the Indus Valley people has received considerable attention, especially from the view of identifying precursors to deities and religious practices of Indian religions that later developed in the area. However, due to the sparsity of evidence, which is open to varying interpretations, and the fact that the Indus script remains undeciphered, the conclusions are partly speculative and largely based on a retrospective view from a much later Hindu perspective.[186]

Early and influential work in the area that set the trend for Hindu interpretations of archaeological evidence from the Harappan sites[187] was that of John Marshall, who in 1931 identified the following as prominent features of the Indus religion: a Great Male God and a Mother Goddess; deification or veneration of animals and plants; a symbolic representation of the phallus (linga) and vulva (yoni); and, use of baths and water in religious practice. Marshall's interpretations have been much debated, and sometimes disputed over the following decades.[188][189]

One Indus Valley seal shows a seated figure with a horned headdress, possibly tricephalic and possibly ithyphallic, surrounded by animals. Marshall identified the figure as an early form of the Hindu god Shiva (or Rudra), who is associated with asceticism, yoga, and linga; regarded as a lord of animals, and often depicted as having three eyes. The seal has hence come to be known as the Pashupati Seal, after Pashupati (lord of all animals), an epithet of Shiva.[188][190] While Marshall's work has earned some support, many critics and even supporters have raised several objections. Doris Srinivasan has argued that the figure does not have three faces or yogic posture and that in Vedic literature Rudra was not a protector of wild animals.[191][192] Herbert Sullivan and Alf Hiltebeitel also rejected Marshall's conclusions, with the former claiming that the figure was female, while the latter associated the figure with Mahisha, the Buffalo God and the surrounding animals with vahanas (vehicles) of deities for the four cardinal directions.[193][194] Writing in 2002, Gregory L. Possehl concluded that while it would be appropriate to recognise the figure as a deity, its association with the water buffalo, and its posture as one of ritual discipline, regarding it as a proto-Shiva would be going too far.[190] Despite the criticisms of Marshall's association of the seal with a proto-Shiva icon, it has been interpreted as the Tirthankara Rishabhanatha by some scholars of Jainism like Vilas Sangave.[195] Historians such as Heinrich Zimmer and Thomas McEvilley believe that there is a connection between first Jain Tirthankara Rishabhanatha and the Indus Valley Civilisation.[196][197]

Marshall hypothesised the existence of a cult of Mother Goddess worship based upon excavation of several female figurines and thought that this was a precursor of the Hindu sect of Shaktism. However the function of the female figurines in the life of Indus Valley people remains unclear, and Possehl does not regard the evidence for Marshall's hypothesis to be "terribly robust".[198] Some of the baetyls interpreted by Marshall to be sacred phallic representations are now thought to have been used as pestles or game counters instead, while the ring stones that were thought to symbolise yoni were determined to be architectural features used to stand pillars, although the possibility of their religious symbolism cannot be eliminated.[199] Many Indus Valley seals show animals, with some depicting them being carried in processions, while others show chimeric creations. One seal from Mohenjo-daro shows a half-human, a half-buffalo monster attacking a tiger, which may be a reference to the Sumerian myth of such a monster created by goddess Aruru to fight Gilgamesh.[200]

In contrast to contemporary Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilisations, Indus Valley lacks any monumental palaces, even though excavated cities indicate that the society possessed the requisite engineering knowledge.[201][202] This may suggest that religious ceremonies if any, may have been largely confined to individual homes, small temples, or the open air. Several sites have been proposed by Marshall and later scholars as possibly devoted to religious purposes, but at present only the Great Bath at Mohenjo-daro is widely thought to have been so used, as a place for ritual purification.[198][203] The funerary practices of the Harappan civilisation are marked by fractional burial (in which the body is reduced to skeletal remains by exposure to the elements before final interment), and even cremation.[204][205]

Late Harappan

 
Late Harappan Period, c. 1900–1300 BCE
 
Late Harappan figures from a hoard at Daimabad, 2000 BCE (Prince of Wales Museum, Bombay)[206]

Around 1900 BCE signs of a gradual decline began to emerge, and by around 1700 BCE most of the cities had been abandoned. Recent examination of human skeletons from the site of Harappa has demonstrated that the end of the Indus civilisation saw an increase in inter-personal violence and in infectious diseases like leprosy and tuberculosis.[207][208]

According to historian Upinder Singh, "the general picture presented by the late Harappan phase is one of a breakdown of urban networks and an expansion of rural ones."[209]

During the period of approximately 1900 to 1700 BCE, multiple regional cultures emerged within the area of the Indus civilisation. The Cemetery H culture was in Punjab, Haryana, and Western Uttar Pradesh, the Jhukar culture was in Sindh, and the Rangpur culture (characterised by Lustrous Red Ware pottery) was in Gujarat.[210][211][212] Other sites associated with the Late phase of the Harappan culture are Pirak in Balochistan, Pakistan, and Daimabad in Maharashtra, India.[106]

The largest Late Harappan sites are Kudwala in Cholistan, Bet Dwarka in Gujarat, and Daimabad in Maharashtra, which can be considered as urban, but they are smaller and few in number compared with the Mature Harappan cities. Bet Dwarka was fortified and continued to have contacts with the Persian Gulf region, but there was a general decrease of long-distance trade.[213] On the other hand, the period also saw a diversification of the agricultural base, with a diversity of crops and the advent of double-cropping, as well as a shift of rural settlement towards the east and the south.[214]

The pottery of the Late Harappan period is described as "showing some continuity with mature Harappan pottery traditions," but also distinctive differences.[215] Many sites continued to be occupied for some centuries, although their urban features declined and disappeared. Formerly typical artifacts such as stone weights and female figurines became rare. There are some circular stamp seals with geometric designs, but lacking the Indus script which characterised the mature phase of the civilisation. Script is rare and confined to potsherd inscriptions.[215] There was also a decline in long-distance trade, although the local cultures show new innovations in faience and glass making, and carving of stone beads.[106] Urban amenities such as drains and the public bath were no longer maintained, and newer buildings were "poorly constructed". Stone sculptures were deliberately vandalised, valuables were sometimes concealed in hoards, suggesting unrest, and the corpses of animals and even humans were left unburied in the streets and in abandoned buildings.[216]

During the later half of the 2nd millennium BCE, most of the post-urban Late Harappan settlements were abandoned altogether. Subsequent material culture was typically characterised by temporary occupation, "the campsites of a population which was nomadic and mainly pastoralist" and which used "crude handmade pottery."[217] However, there is greater continuity and overlap between Late Harappan and subsequent cultural phases at sites in Punjab, Haryana, and western Uttar Pradesh, primarily small rural settlements.[214][218]

Aryan migration

 
Painted pottery urns from Harappa (Cemetery H culture, c. 1900–1300 BCE), National Museum, New Delhi

In 1953 Sir Mortimer Wheeler proposed that the invasion of an Indo-European tribe from Central Asia, the "Aryans", caused the decline of the Indus civilisation. As evidence, he cited a group of 37 skeletons found in various parts of Mohenjo-daro, and passages in the Vedas referring to battles and forts. However, scholars soon started to reject Wheeler's theory, since the skeletons belonged to a period after the city's abandonment and none were found near the citadel. Subsequent examinations of the skeletons by Kenneth Kennedy in 1994 showed that the marks on the skulls were caused by erosion, and not by violence.[219]

In the Cemetery H culture (the late Harappan phase in the Punjab region), some of the designs painted on the funerary urns have been interpreted through the lens of Vedic literature: for instance, peacocks with hollow bodies and a small human form inside, which has been interpreted as the souls of the dead, and a hound that can be seen as the hound of Yama, the god of death.[220][221] This may indicate the introduction of new religious beliefs during this period, but the archaeological evidence does not support the hypothesis that the Cemetery H people were the destroyers of the Harappan cities.[222]

Climate change and drought

Suggested contributory causes for the localisation of the IVC include changes in the course of the river,[223] and climate change that is also signaled for the neighboring areas of the Middle East.[224][225] As of 2016 many scholars believe that drought, and a decline in trade with Egypt and Mesopotamia, caused the collapse of the Indus civilisation.[226] The climate change which caused the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisation was possibly due to "an abrupt and critical mega-drought and cooling 4,200 years ago," which marks the onset of the Meghalayan Age, the present stage of the Holocene.[227]

The Ghaggar-Hakra system was rain-fed,[228][ak][229][al] and water-supply depended on the monsoons. The Indus Valley climate grew significantly cooler and drier from about 1800 BCE, linked to a general weakening of the monsoon at that time.[4] The Indian monsoon declined and aridity increased, with the Ghaggar-Hakra retracting its reach towards the foothills of the Himalaya,[4][230][231] leading to erratic and less extensive floods that made inundation agriculture less sustainable.

Aridification reduced the water supply enough to cause the civilisation's demise, and scatter its population eastward.[232][233][108][e] According to Giosan et al. (2012), the IVC residents did not develop irrigation capabilities, relying mainly on the seasonal monsoons leading to summer floods. As the monsoons kept shifting south, the floods grew too erratic for sustainable agricultural activities. The residents then migrated towards the Ganges basin in the east, where they established smaller villages and isolated farms. The small surplus produced in these small communities did not allow the development of trade, and the cities died out.[234][235]

Continuity and coexistence

Archaeological excavations indicate that the decline of Harappa drove people eastward.[236] According to Possehl, after 1900 BCE the number of sites in today's India increased from 218 to 853. According to Andrew Lawler, "excavations along the Gangetic plain show that cities began to arise there starting about 1200 BCE, just a few centuries after Harappa was deserted and much earlier than once suspected."[226][am] According to Jim Shaffer there was a continuous series of cultural developments, just as in most areas of the world. These link "the so-called two major phases of urbanisation in South Asia".[238]

At sites such as Bhagwanpura (in Haryana), archaeological excavations have discovered an overlap between the final phase of Late Harappan pottery and the earliest phase of Painted Grey Ware pottery, the latter being associated with the Vedic culture and dating from around 1200 BCE. This site provides evidence of multiple social groups occupying the same village but using different pottery and living in different types of houses: "over time the Late Harappan pottery was gradually replaced by Painted Grey ware pottery," and other cultural changes indicated by archaeology include the introduction of the horse, iron tools, and new religious practices.[106]

There is also a Harappan site called Rojdi in Rajkot district of Saurashtra. Its excavation started under an archaeological team from Gujarat State Department of Archaeology and the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania in 1982–83. In their report on archaeological excavations at Rojdi, Gregory Possehl and M.H. Raval write that although there are "obvious signs of cultural continuity" between the Harappan civilisation and later South Asian cultures, many aspects of the Harappan "sociocultural system" and "integrated civilization" were "lost forever," while the Second Urbanisation of India (beginning with the Northern Black Polished Ware culture, c. 600 BCE) "lies well outside this sociocultural environment".[239]

Post-Harappan

Previously, scholars believed that the decline of the Harappan civilisation led to an interruption of urban life in the Indian subcontinent. However, the Indus Valley Civilisation did not disappear suddenly, and many elements of the Indus civilisation appear in later cultures. The Cemetery H culture may be the manifestation of the Late Harappan over a large area in the region of Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh, and the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture its successor. David Gordon White cites three other mainstream scholars who "have emphatically demonstrated" that Vedic religion derives partially from the Indus Valley Civilisations.[240]

As of 2016, archaeological data suggests that the material culture classified as Late Harappan may have persisted until at least c. 1000–900 BCE and was partially contemporaneous with the Painted Grey Ware culture.[238] Harvard archaeologist Richard Meadow points to the late Harappan settlement of Pirak, which thrived continuously from 1800 BCE to the time of the invasion of Alexander the Great in 325 BCE.[226]

In the aftermath of the Indus civilisation's localisation, regional cultures emerged, to varying degrees showing the influence of the Indus civilisation. In the formerly great city of Harappa, burials have been found that correspond to a regional culture called the Cemetery H culture. At the same time, the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture expanded from Rajasthan into the Gangetic Plain. The Cemetery H culture has the earliest evidence for cremation; a practice dominant in Hinduism today.

The inhabitants of the Indus Valley Civilisation migrated from the river valleys of Indus and Ghaggar-Hakra, towards the Himalayan foothills of the Ganga-Yamuna basin.[241]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Wright: "Mesopotamia and Egypt ... co-existed with the Indus civilization during its florescence between 2600 and 1900 BC."[2]
  2. ^ Wright: "The Indus civilisation is one of three in the 'Ancient East' that, along with Mesopotamia and Pharaonic Egypt, was a cradle of early civilisation in the Old World (Childe, 1950). Mesopotamia and Egypt were longer-lived, but coexisted with Indus civilisation during its florescence between 2600 and 1900 B.C. Of the three, the Indus was the most expansive, extending from today’s northeast Afghanistan to Pakistan and India."[3]
  3. ^ Habib: "Harappa, in Sahiwal district of west Punjab, Pakistan, had long been known to archaeologists as an extensive site on the Ravi river, but its true significance as a major city of an early great civilization remained unrecognized until the discovery of Mohenjo-daro near the banks of the Indus, in the Larkana district of Sindh, by Rakhaldas Banerji in 1922. Sir John Marshall, then Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India, used the term 'Indus civilization' for the culture discovered at Harappa and Mohenjo-daro, a term doubly apt because of the geographical context implied in the name 'Indus' and the presence of cities implied in the word 'civilization'. Others, notably the Archaeological Survey of India after Independence, have preferred to call it `Harappan', or 'Mature Harappan', taking Harappa to be its type-site."[5]
  4. ^ These covered carnelian products, seal carving, work in copper, bronze, lead, and tin.[9]
  5. ^ a b c Brooke (2014), p. 296. "The story in Harappan India was somewhat different (see Figure 111.3). The Bronze Age village and urban societies of the Indus Valley are something of an anomaly, in that archaeologists have found little indication of local defense and regional warfare. It would seem that the bountiful monsoon rainfall of the Early to Mid-Holocene had forged a condition of plenty for all and that competitive energies were channeled into commerce rather than conflict. Scholars have long argued that these rains shaped the origins of the urban Harappan societies, which emerged from Neolithic villages around 2600 BC. It now appears that this rainfall began to slowly taper off in the third millennium, at just the point that the Harappan cities began to develop. Thus it seems that this "first urbanisation" in South Asia was the initial response of the Indus Valley peoples to the beginning of Late Holocene aridification. These cities were maintained for 300 to 400 years and then gradually abandoned as the Harappan peoples resettled in scattered villages in the eastern range of their territories, into Punjab and the Ganges Valley....' 17 (footnote):
    (a) Giosan et al. (2012);
    (b) Ponton et al. (2012);
    (c) Rashid et al. (2011);
    (d) Madella & Fuller (2006);
    Compare with the very different interpretations in
    (e) Possehl (2002), pp. 237–245
    (f) Staubwasser et al. (2003)
  6. ^ Possehl: "There are 1,056 Mature Harappan sites that have been reported of which 96 have been excavated."[13]
  7. ^ Coningham and Young: "More than 1,000 settlements belonging to the Integrated Era have been identified (Singh, 2008: 137), but there are only five significant urban sites at the peak of the settlement hierarchy (Smith, 2.006a: 110) (Figure 6.2).These are: Mohenjo-daro in the lower Indus plain; Harappa in the western Punjab; Ganweriwala in Cholistan; Dholavira in western Gujarat; and Rakhigarhi in Haryana. Mohenjo-daro covered an area of more than 250 hectares, Harappa exceeded 150 hectares, Dholavira 100 hectares and Ganweriwala and Rakhigarhi around 80 hectares each."[16]
  8. ^ Wright: "Five major Indus cities are discussed in this chapter. During the Urban period, the early town of Harappa expanded in size and population and became a major centre in the Upper Indus. Other cities emerging during the Urban period include Mohenjo-daro in the Lower Indus, Dholavira to the south on the western edge of peninsular India in Kutch, Ganweriwala in Cholistan, and a fifth city, Rakhigarhi, on the Ghaggar-Hakra. Rakhigarhi will be discussed briefly in view of the limited published material."[17]
  9. ^ Wright: "Unable to state the age of the civilization, he went on to observe that the Indus (which he (John Marshall) named after the river system) artifacts differed from any known other civilizations in the region, ..."[21]
  10. ^ Habib: "Sir John Marshall, then Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India, used the term 'Indus civilization' for the culture discovered at Harappa and Mohenjo-daro, a term doubly apt because of the geographical context implied in the name 'Indus' and the presence of cities implied in the word 'civilization'. Others, notably the Archaeological Survey of India after Independence, have preferred to call it 'Harappan', or 'Mature Harappan', taking Harappa to be its type-site."[22]
  11. ^ Giosan (2012): "Numerous speculations have advanced the idea that the Ghaggar-Hakra fluvial system, at times identified with the lost mythical river of Sarasvati (e.g., 4, 5, 7, 19), was a large glacier fed Himalayan river. Potential sources for this river include the Yamuna River, the Sutlej River, or both rivers. However, the lack of large-scale incision on the interfluve demonstrates that large, glacier-fed rivers did not flow across the Ghaggar-Hakra region during the Holocene. ... The present Ghaggar-Hakra valley and its tributary rivers are currently dry or have seasonal flows. Yet rivers were undoubtedly active in this region during the Urban Harappan Phase. We recovered sandy fluvial deposits approximately 5,400 y old at Fort Abbas in Pakistan (SI Text), and recent work (33) on the upper Ghaggar-Hakra interfluve in India also documented Holocene channel sands that are approximately 4,300 y old. On the upper interfluve, fine-grained floodplain deposition continued until the end of the Late Harappan Phase, as recent as 2,900 y ago (33) (Fig. 2B). This widespread fluvial redistribution of sediment suggests that reliable monsoon rains were able to sustain perennial rivers earlier during the Holocene and explains why Harappan settlements flourished along the entire Ghaggar-Hakra system without access to a glacier-fed river."[4]
  12. ^ Fisher: "This was the same broad period that saw the rise of the civilisations of Mesopotamia (between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers), Egypt (along the Nile), and northeast China (in the Yellow River basin). At its peak, the Indus was the most extensive of these ancient civilisations, extending 1,500 km (900 mi) up the Indus plain, with a core area of 30,000 to 100,000 km2 (12,000 to 39,000 sq mi) and with more ecologically diverse peripheral spheres of economic and cultural influence extending out to ten times that area. The cultural and technological uniformity of the Indus cities is especially striking in light of the relatively great distances among them, with separations of about 280 km (170 mi) whereas the Mesopotamian cities, for example, only averaged about 20 to 25 km (12 to 16 mi) apart.[26]
  13. ^ Dyson: "The subcontinent's people were hunter-gatherers for many millennia. There were very few of them. Indeed, 10,000 years ago there may only have been a couple of hundred thousand people, living in small, often isolated groups, the descendants of various 'modern' human incomers. Then, perhaps linked to events in Mesopotamia, about 8,500 years ago agriculture emerged in Baluchistan."[27]
  14. ^ Fisher: "The earliest discovered instance in India of well-established, settled agricultural society is at Mehrgarh in the hills between the Bolan Pass and the Indus plain (today in Pakistan) (see Map 3.1). From as early as 7000 BCE, communities there started investing increased labor in preparing the land and selecting, planting, tending, and harvesting particular grain-producing plants. They also domesticated animals, including sheep, goats, pigs, and oxen (both humped zebu [Bos indicus] and unhumped [Bos taurus]). Castrating oxen, for instance, turned them from mainly meat sources into domesticated draft-animals as well.[28]
  15. ^ Coningham and Young: "Mehrgarh remains one of the key sites in South Asia because it has provided the earliest known undisputed evidence for farming and pastoral communities in the region, and its plant and animal material provide clear evidence for the ongoing manipulation, and domestication, of certain species. Perhaps most importantly in a South Asian context, the role played by zebu makes this a distinctive, localised development, with a character completely different to other parts of the world. Finally, the longevity of the site, and its articulation with the neighbouring site of Nausharo (c. 2800–2000 BCE), provides a very clear continuity from South Asia's first farming villages to the emergence of its first cities (Jarrige, 1984)."[29]
  16. ^ Dyson: "In the millennia which followed, farming developed and spread slowly into the Indus valley and adjacent areas. The transition to agriculture led to population growth and the eventual rise of the Indus civilisation. With the movement to settled agriculture, and the emergence of villages, towns and cities, there was probably a modest rise in the average death rate and a slightly greater rise in the birth rate."[27]
  17. ^ Dyson: "Mohenjo-daro and Harappa may each have contained between 30,000 and 60,000 people (perhaps more in the former case). Water transport was crucial for the provisioning of these and other cities. That said, the vast majority of people lived in rural areas. At the height of the Indus valley civilisation the subcontinent may have contained 4-6 million people."[27]
  18. ^ Fisher: "Such an "agricultural revolution" enabled food surpluses that supported growing populations. Their, largely cereal diet did not necessarily make people healthier, however, since conditions like caries and protein deficiencies can increase. Further, infectious diseases spread faster with denser living conditions of both humans and domesticated animals (which can spread measles, influenza, and other diseases to humans)."[28]
  19. ^ McIntosh: "Population Growth and Distribution: "The prehistory of the Indo-Iranian borderlands shows a steady increase over time in the number and density of settlements based on farming and pastoralism. By contrast, the population of the Indus plains and adjacent regions lived mainly by hunting and gathering; the limited traces suggest their settlements were far fewer in number, and were small and widely scattered, though to some extent this apparent situation must reflect the difficulty of locating hunter-gatherer settlements. The presence of domestic animals in some hunter-gatherer settlements attests to contact with the people of the border-lands, probably in the context of pastoralists' seasonal movement from the hills into the plains. The potential for population expansion in the hills was severely limited, and so, from the fourth millennium into the third, settlers moved out from the borderlands into the plains and beyond into Gujarat, the first being pastoralists, followed later by farmers. The enormous potential of the greater Indus region offered scope for huge population increase; by the end of the Mature Harappan period, the Harappans are estimated to have numbered somewhere between 1 and 5 million, probably well below the region's carrying capacity."[30]
  20. ^ Masson: "A long march preceded our arrival at Haripah, through jangal of the closest description ... When I joined the camp I found it in front of the village and ruinous brick castle. Behind us was a large circular mound, or eminence, and to the west was an irregular rocky height, crowned with the remains of buildings, in fragments of walls, with niches, after the eastern manner ... Tradition affirms the existence here of a city, so considerable that it extended to Chicha Watni, thirteen cosses distant, and that it was destroyed by a particular visitation of Providence, brought down by the lust and crimes of the sovereign."[42]
  21. ^ Guha: "The intense explorations to locate sites related to the Indus civilisation along the Ghaggar-Hakra, mostly by the Archaeological Survey of India immediately after Indian independence (from the 1950s through the ‘70s), although ostensibly following Sir Aurel Stein’s explorations in 1942, were to a large extent initiated by a patriotic zeal to compensate for the loss of this more ancient civilisation by the newly freed nation; as apart from Rangpur (Gujarat) and Kotla Nihang Khan (Punjab), the sites remained in Pakistan."[54]
  22. ^ Number of Indus script inscribed objects and seals obtained from various Harappan sites: 1540 from Mohanjodaro, 985 from Harappa, 66 from Chanhudaro, 165 from Lothal, 99 from Kalibangan, 7 from Banawali, 6 from Ur in Iraq, 5 from Surkotada, 4 from Chandigarh
  23. ^ According to Ahmad Hasan Dani, professor emeritus at Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad, the discovery of Mehrgarh "changed the entire concept of the Indus civilisation ... There we have the whole sequence, right from the beginning of settled village life."[64]
  24. ^ a b According to Gangal et al. (2014), there is strong archeological and geographical evidence that neolithic farming spread from the Near East into north-west India.[79][80] Gangal et al. (2014):[79] "There are several lines of evidence that support the idea of a connection between the Neolithic in the Near East and in the Indian subcontinent. The prehistoric site of Mehrgarh in Baluchistan (modern Pakistan) is the earliest Neolithic site in the north-west Indian subcontinent, dated as early as 8500 BCE."[82]
  25. ^ Neolithic domesticated crops in Mehrgarh include more than 90% barley and a small amount of wheat. There is good evidence for the local domestication of barley and the zebu cattle at Mehrgarh,[81][83] but the wheat varieties are suggested to be of Near-Eastern origin, as the modern distribution of wild varieties of wheat is limited to Northern Levant and Southern Turkey.[84] A detailed satellite map study of a few archaeological sites in the Baluchistan and Khybar Pakhtunkhwa regions also suggests similarities in early phases of farming with sites in Western Asia.[85] Pottery prepared by sequential slab construction, circular fire pits filled with burnt pebbles, and large granaries are common to both Mehrgarh and many Mesopotamian sites.[86] The postures of the skeletal remains in graves at Mehrgarh bear strong resemblance to those at Ali Kosh in the Zagros Mountains of southern Iran.[81] Clay figurines found in Mehrgarh resemble those discovered at Teppe Zagheh on the Qazvin plain south of the Elburz range in Iran (the 7th millennium BCE) and Jeitun in Turkmenistan (the 6th millennium BCE).[87] Strong arguments have been made for the Near-Eastern origin of some domesticated plants and herd animals at Jeitun in Turkmenistan (pp. 225–227).[88]
  26. ^ The Near East is separated from the Indus Valley by the arid plateaus, ridges and deserts of Iran and Afghanistan, where rainfall agriculture is possible only in the foothills and cul-de-sac valleys.[89] Nevertheless, this area was not an insurmountable obstacle for the dispersal of the Neolithic. The route south of the Caspian sea is a part of the Silk Road, some sections of which were in use from at least 3,000 BCE, connecting Badakhshan (north-eastern Afghanistan and south-eastern Tajikistan) with Western Asia, Egypt and India.[90] Similarly, the section from Badakhshan to the Mesopotamian plains (the Great Khorasan Road) was apparently functioning by 4,000 BCE and numerous prehistoric sites are located along it, whose assemblages are dominated by the Cheshmeh-Ali (Tehran Plain) ceramic technology, forms and designs.[89] Striking similarities in figurines and pottery styles, and mud-brick shapes, between widely separated early Neolithic sites in the Zagros Mountains of north-western Iran (Jarmo and Sarab), the Deh Luran Plain in southwestern Iran (Tappeh Ali Kosh and Chogha Sefid), Susiana (Chogha Bonut and Chogha Mish), the Iranian Central Plateau (Tappeh-Sang-e Chakhmaq), and Turkmenistan (Jeitun) suggest a common incipient culture.[91] The Neolithic dispersal across South Asia plausibly involved migration of the population.[92][88] This possibility is also supported by Y-chromosome and mtDNA analyses,[93][94]
  27. ^ They further noted that "the direct lineal descendents of the Neolithic inhabitants of Mehrgarh are to be found to the south and the east of Mehrgarh, in northwestern India and the western edge of the Deccan plateau," with neolithic Mehrgarh showing greater affinity with chalocolithic Inamgaon, south of Mehrgarh, than with chalcolithic Mehrgarh.[95]
  28. ^ Gallego romero et al. (2011) refer to (Meadow 1993):[97] Meadow RH. 1993. Animal domestication in the Middle East: a revised view from the eastern margin. In: Possehl G, editor. Harappan civilization. New Delhi: Oxford University Press and India Book House. pp. 295–320.[98]
  29. ^ It has been noted that the courtyard pattern and techniques of flooring of Harappan houses has similarities to the way house-building is still done in some villages of the region.[114]
  30. ^ a b Gangal refers to Jarrige (2008a) and Costantini (2008)
  31. ^ Gangal refers to Fuller (2006)
  32. ^ A large proportion of data however remains ambiguous. Reliable local isotopic references for fats and oils are unavailable, and lipid levels in IVC vessels are quite low.
  33. ^ See:
    • David McAlpin, "Toward Proto-Elamo-Dravidian", Language vol. 50 no. 1 (1974);
    • David McAlpin: "Elamite and Dravidian, Further Evidence of Relationships", Current Anthropology vol. 16 no. 1 (1975);
    • David McAlpin: "Linguistic prehistory: the Dravidian situation", in Madhav M. Deshpande and Peter Edwin Hook: Aryan and Non-Aryan in India, Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (1979);
    • David McAlpin, "Proto-Elamo-Dravidian: The Evidence and its Implications", Transactions of the American Philosophical Society vol. 71 pt. 3, (1981)
  34. ^ See also:
    • Mukherjee et al. (2001): "More recently, about 15,000–10,000 years before present (ybp), when agriculture developed in the Fertile Crescent region that extends from Israel through northern Syria to western Iran, there was another eastward wave of human migration (Cavalli-Sforza et al., 1994; Renfrew 1987), a part of which also appears to have entered India. This wave has been postulated to have brought the Dravidian languages into India (Renfrew 1987). Subsequently, the Indo-European (Aryan) language family was introduced into India about 4,000 ybp."
    • Derenko (2013): "The spread of these new technologies has been associated with the dispersal of Dravidian and Indo-European languages in southern Asia. It is hypothesized that the proto-Elamo-Dravidian language, most likely originated in the Elam province in southwestern Iran, spread eastwards with the movement of farmers to the Indus Valley and the Indian sub-continent."

      Derenko refers to:
      * Renfrew (1987), Archaeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins
      * Renfrew (1996), Language families and the spread of farming. In: Harris DR, editor, The origins and spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia, pp. 70–92
      * Cavalli-Sforza, Menozzi & Piazza (1994).
  35. ^ Kumar: "The analysis of two Y chromosome variants, Hgr9 and Hgr3 provides interesting data (Quintan-Murci et al., 2001). Microsatellite variation of Hgr9 among Iranians, Pakistanis and Indians indicate an expansion of populations to around 9000 YBP in Iran and then to 6,000 YBP in India. This migration originated in what was historically termed Elam in south-west Iran to the Indus valley, and may have been associated with the spread of Dravidian languages from south-west Iran (Quintan-Murci et al., 2001)."[174]
  36. ^ Nevertheless, Kivisild et al. (1999) note that "a small fraction of the West Eurasian mtDNA lineages found in Indian populations can be ascribed to a relatively recent admixture."[172] at c. 9,300±3,000 years before present,[173] which coincides with "the arrival to India of cereals domesticated in the Fertile Crescent" and "lends credence to the suggested linguistic connection between the Elamite and Dravidic populations."[173] According to Kumar (2004), referring to Quintan-Murci et al. (2001), "microsatellite variation of Hgr9 among Iranians, Pakistanis and Indians indicate an expansion of populations to around 9000 YBP in Iran and then to 6,000 YBP in India. This migration originated in what was historically termed Elam in south-west Iran to the Indus valley, and may have been associated with the spread of Dravidian languages from south-west Iran."[174][ai] According to Palanichamy et al. (2015), "The presence of mtDNA haplogroups (HV14 and U1a) and Y-chromosome haplogroup (L1) in Dravidian populations indicates the spread of the Dravidian language into India from west Asia."[175]
  37. ^ Geological research by a group led by Peter Clift investigated how the courses of rivers have changed in this region since 8000 years ago, to test whether climate or river reorganisations caused the decline of the Harappan. Using U-Pb dating of zircon sand grains they found that sediments typical of the Beas, Sutlej, and Yamuna rivers (Himalayan tributaries of the Indus) are actually present in former Ghaggar-Hakra channels. However, sediment contributions from these glacial-fed rivers stopped at least by 10,000 years ago, well before the development of the Indus civilisation.[228]
  38. ^ Tripathi et al. (2004) found that the isotopes of sediments carried by the Ghaggar-Hakra system over the last 20 thousand years do not come from the glaciated Higher Himalaya but have a sub-Himalayan source, and concluded that the river system was rain-fed. They also concluded that this contradicted the idea of a Harappan-time mighty "Sarasvati" river.[229]
  39. ^ Most sites of the Painted Grey Ware culture in the Ghaggar-Hakra and Upper Ganges Plain were small farming villages. However, "several dozen" PGW sites eventually emerged as relatively large settlements that can be characterized as towns, the largest of which were fortified by ditches or moats and embankments made of piled earth with wooden palisades, albeit smaller and simpler than the elaborately fortified large cities which grew after 600 BCE in the more fully urban Northern Black Polished Ware culture.[237]

References

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  9. ^ Wright 2009, pp. 115–125.
  10. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 29 "Mohenjo-daro and Harappa may each have contained between 30,000 and 60,000 people (perhaps more in the former case). Water transport was crucial for the provisioning of these and other cities. That said, the vast majority of people lived in rural areas. At the height of the Indus valley civilization the subcontinent may have contained 4-6 million people."
  11. ^ McIntosh 2008, p. 387: "The enormous potential of the greater Indus region offered scope for huge population increase; by the end of the Mature Harappan period, the Harappans are estimated to have numbered somewhere between 1 and 5 million, probably well below the region's carrying capacity."
  12. ^ Possehl 2002a.
  13. ^ a b c Possehl 2002a. "There are 1,056 Mature Harappan sites that have been reported of which 96 have been excavated."
  14. ^ a b Possehl 2002, p. 20.
  15. ^ a b Singh, Upinder 2008, p. 137. "Today, the count of Harappan sites has risen to about 1,022, of which 406 are in Pakistan and 616 in India. Of these, only 97 have so far been excavated."
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  56. ^ Ratnagar 2006b, pp. 7–8, "If in an ancient mound we find only one pot and two bead necklaces similar to those of Harappa and Mohenjo-daro, with the bulk of pottery, tools and ornaments of a different type altogether, we cannot call that site Harappan. It is instead a site with Harappan contacts. ... Where the Sarasvati valley sites are concerned, we find that many of them are sites of local culture (with distinctive pottery, clay bangles, terracotta beads, and grinding stones), some of them showing Harappan contact, and comparatively few are full-fledged Mature Harappan sites."
  57. ^ Iravatham Mahadevan, 1977, The Indus Script: Text, Concordance and Tables, pp. 6-7
  58. ^ Upinder Singh, 2008, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century, p. 169
  59. ^ a b Coningham & Young 2015, p. 192. "More than 1,000 settlements belonging to the Integrated Era have been identified (Singh, 2008: 137), but there are only five significant urban sites at the peak of the settlement hierarchy (Smith, 2.006a: 110) (Figure 6.2). These are Mohenjo-daro in the lower Indus plain, Harappa in the western Punjab, Ganweriwala in Cholistan, Dholavira in western Gujarat and Rakhigarhi in Haryana. Mohenjo-daro covered an area of more than 250 hectares, Harappa exceeded 150 hectares, Dholavira 100 hectares and Ganweriwala and Rakhigarhi around 80 hectares each."
  60. ^ Michon 2015, pp. 44ff: Quote: "After Partition, the archaeological work on the early historic period in India and Pakistan developed differently. In India, while the colonial administrative structure remained intact, the ASI made a concerted effort to Indianise' the field. The early historic period was understood as an important chapter in the long, unified history of the Indian subcontinent, and this understanding supported Indian goals of national unity. In Pakistan, however, the project of nation building was focused more on promoting the rich Islamic archaeological heritage within its borders, and most early historic sites, therefore, were left to the spades of foreign missions."
  61. ^ Coningham & Young 2015, p. 85: Quote: "At the same time he continued to spend part of the years 1949 and 1950 in Pakistan as an adviser to the Government, overseeing the establishment of the government’s Department of Archaeology in Pakistan and the National Museum of Pakistan in Karachi ... He returned to Pakistan in 1958 to carry out excavations at Charsadda and then joined the UNESCO team concerned with the preservation and conservation of Mohenjo-daro during the 1960s. Mohenjo-daro was eventually inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1980."
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Further reading

  • Allchin, Bridget (1997). Origins of a Civilization: The Prehistory and Early Archaeology of South Asia. New York: Viking.
  • Aronovsky, Ilona; Gopinath, Sujata (2005). The Indus Valley. Chicago: Heinemann.
  • Bar-Matthews, Miryam; Ayalon, Avner (2011). "Mid-Holocene climate variations revealed by high-resolution speleothem records from Soreq Cave, Israel and their correlation with cultural changes". The Holocene. 21 (1): 163–171. Bibcode:2011Holoc..21..163B. doi:10.1177/0959683610384165. ISSN 0959-6836. S2CID 129380409.
  • Basham, A.L. (1967). The Wonder that was India. London: Sidgwick & Jackson. pp. 11–14.
  • Chakrabarti, D.K. (2004). Indus Civilization Sites in India: New Discoveries. Mumbai: Marg Publications. ISBN 978-81-85026-63-3.
  • Dani, Ahmad Hassan (1984). Short History of Pakistan (Book 1). University of Karachi.
  • Dani, Ahmad Hassan; Mohen, J-P., eds. (1996). History of Humanity, Volume III, From the Third Millennium to the Seventh Century BC. New York/Paris: Routledge/UNESCO. ISBN 978-0-415-09306-4.
  • Dikshit, K.N. (2013). (PDF). Journal of Indian Ocean Archaeology (9). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2017.
  • Gupta, S.P., ed. (1995). The lost Sarasvati and the Indus Civilisation. Jodhpur: Kusumanjali Prakashan.
  • Gupta, S.P. (1996). The Indus-Saraswati Civilization: Origins, Problems and Issues. Delhi: Pratibha Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-85268-46-0.
  • Kathiroli; et al. (2004). "Recent Marine Archaeological Finds in Khambhat, Gujarat". Journal of Indian Ocean Archaeology (1): 141–149.
  • Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark; Heuston, Kimberly (2005). The Ancient South Asian World. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517422-9.
  • Lahiri, Nayanjot, ed. (2000). The Decline and Fall of the Indus Civilisation. Delhi: Permanent Black. ISBN 978-81-7530-034-7.
  • Lal, B.B. (1998). India 1947–1997: New Light on the Indus Civilization. New Delhi: Aryan Books International. ISBN 978-81-7305-129-6.
  • Lal, B.B. (1997). The Earliest Civilisation of South Asia (Rise, Maturity and Decline).
  • Lazaridis, Iosif; et al. (2016). "Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the ancient Near East". Nature. 536 (7617): 419–424. Bibcode:2016Natur.536..419L. bioRxiv 10.1101/059311. doi:10.1038/nature19310. PMC 5003663. PMID 27459054.
  • Mani, B.R. (2008). (PDF). Pragdhara. 18: 229–247. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  • McIntosh, Jane (2001). A Peaceful Realm: The Rise And Fall of the Indus Civilization. Boulder: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-3532-2.
  • Mirabal S, Regueiro M, Cadenas AM, Cavalli-Sforza LL, et al. (2009). "Y-Chromosome distribution within the geo-linguistic landscape of northwestern Russia". European Journal of Human Genetics. 17 (10): 1260–1273. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2009.6. PMC 2986641. PMID 19259129.
  • Mughal, Mohammad Rafique (1997). Ancient Cholistan, Archaeology and Architecture. Ferozesons. ISBN 978-969-0-01350-7.
  • Narasimhan, Vagheesh M.; Anthony, David; Mallory, James; Reich, David; et al. (September 2019). "The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia". Science. 365 (6457). eaat7487. bioRxiv 10.1101/292581. doi:10.1126/science.aat7487. PMC 6822619. PMID 31488661.
  • Pamjav, Horolma; Fehér, Tibor; Németh, Endre; Pádár, Zsolt (2012). "Brief communication: new Y-chromosome binary markers improve phylogenetic resolution within haplogroup R1a1". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 149 (4): 611–615. doi:10.1002/ajpa.22167. PMID 23115110.
  • Pittman, Holly (1984). Art of the Bronze Age: southeastern Iran, western Central Asia, and the Indus Valley. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-87099-365-7.
  • Poznik, G. David (2016). "Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1,244 worldwide Y-chromosome sequences". Nature Genetics. 48 (6): 593–599. doi:10.1038/ng.3559. PMC 4884158. PMID 27111036.
  • Rao, Shikaripura Ranganatha (1991). Dawn and Devolution of the Indus Civilisation. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-85179-74-2.
  • Semino, O; Passarino G, Oefner PJ (2000). "The genetic legacy of Paleolithic Homo sapiens sapiens in extant Europeans: A Y chromosome perspective". Science. 290 (5494): 1155–1159. Bibcode:2000Sci...290.1155S. doi:10.1126/science.290.5494.1155. PMID 11073453.
  • Sengupta, S; Zhivotovsky, LA; King, R; Mehdi, SQ; et al. (2005). "Polarity and Temporality of High-Resolution Y-Chromosome Distributions in India Identify Both Indigenous and Exogenous Expansions and Reveal Minor Genetic Influence of Central Asian Pastoralists". American Journal of Human Genetics. 78 (2): 202–221. doi:10.1086/499411. PMC 1380230. PMID 16400607.
  • Shaffer, Jim G. (1995). "Cultural tradition and Palaeoethnicity in South Asian Archaeology". In George Erdosy (ed.). Indo-Aryans of Ancient South Asia. Berlin u.a.: de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-014447-5.
  • Thompson, Thomas J. (2005). "Ancient Stateless Civilization: Bronze Age India and the State in History" (PDF). The Independent Review. 10 (3): 365–384. (PDF) from the original on 3 February 2010. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  • Underhill, Peter A.; Myres, Natalie M; Rootsi, Siiri; Metspalu, Mait; et al. (2009). "Separating the post-Glacial coancestry of European and Asian Y chromosomes within haplogroup R1a". European Journal of Human Genetics. 18 (4): 479–484. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2009.194. PMC 2987245. PMID 19888303.
  • Underhill, Peter A.; et al. (2015). "The phylogenetic & geographic structure of Y-chromosome haplogroup R1a". European Journal of Human Genetics. 23 (1): 124–131. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2014.50. ISSN 1018-4813. PMC 4266736. PMID 24667786.
  • Wells, R.S. (2001). "The Eurasian Heartland: A continental perspective on Y-chromosome diversity". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 98 (18): 10244–10249. Bibcode:2001PNAS...9810244W. doi:10.1073/pnas.171305098. PMC 56946. PMID 11526236.
  • Willey; Phillips (1958). Method and Theory in American Archaeology.

External links

  • Harappa and Indus Valley Civilization at harappa.com

indus, valley, civilisation, also, known, indus, civilisation, harappan, civilisation, bronze, civilisation, northwestern, regions, south, asia, lasting, from, 3300, 1300, mature, form, 2600, 1900, together, with, ancient, egypt, mesopotamia, three, early, civ. The Indus Valley Civilisation 1 IVC also known as the Indus Civilisation or the Harappan Civilisation was a Bronze Age civilisation in the northwestern regions of South Asia lasting from 3300 BCE to 1300 BCE and in its mature form 2600 BCE to 1900 BCE 2 a Together with ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia it was one of three early civilisations of the Near East and South Asia and of the three the most widespread Its sites spanned an area from much of Pakistan to northeast Afghanistan and northwestern India 3 b The civilisation flourished both in the alluvial plain of the Indus River which flows through the length of Pakistan and along a system of perennial monsoon fed rivers that once coursed in the vicinity of the Ghaggar Hakra a seasonal river in northwest India and eastern Pakistan 2 4 Indus Valley CivilisationAlternative namesHarappan civilisation ancient Indus Indus civilisationGeographical rangeBasins of the Indus river Pakistan and the seasonal Ghaggar Hakra river northwest India and eastern PakistanPeriodBronze Age South AsiaDatesc 3300 c 1300 BCEType siteHarappaMajor sitesHarappa Mohenjo daro Dholavira and RakhigarhiPreceded byMehrgarhFollowed byPainted Grey Ware cultureExcavated ruins of Mohenjo daro Sindh province Pakistan showing the Great Bath in the foreground Mohenjo daro on the right bank of the Indus River is a UNESCO World Heritage Site the first site in South Asia to be so declared Miniature votive images or toy models from Harappa c 2500 BCE Terracotta figurines indicate the yoking of zebu oxen for pulling a cart and the presence of the chicken a domesticated jungle fowl The term Harappan is sometimes applied to the Indus civilisation after its type site Harappa the first to be excavated early in the 20th century in what was then the Punjab province of British India and is now Punjab Pakistan 5 c The discovery of Harappa and soon afterwards Mohenjo daro was the culmination of work that had begun after the founding of the Archaeological Survey of India in the British Raj in 1861 6 There were earlier and later cultures called Early Harappan and Late Harappan in the same area The early Harappan cultures were populated from Neolithic cultures the earliest and best known of which is Mehrgarh in Balochistan Pakistan 7 8 Harappan civilisation is sometimes called Mature Harappan to distinguish it from the earlier cultures The cities of the ancient Indus were noted for their urban planning baked brick houses elaborate drainage systems water supply systems clusters of large non residential buildings and techniques of handicraft and metallurgy d Mohenjo daro and Harappa very likely grew to contain between 30 000 and 60 000 individuals 10 and the civilisation may have contained between one and five million individuals during its florescence 11 A gradual drying of the region during the 3rd millennium BCE may have been the initial stimulus for its urbanisation Eventually it also reduced the water supply enough to cause the civilisation s demise and to disperse its population to the east e Although over a thousand Mature Harappan sites have been reported and nearly a hundred excavated 12 f 14 15 there are five major urban centres 16 g a Mohenjo daro in the lower Indus Valley declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1980 as Archaeological Ruins at Mohenjodaro b Harappa in the western Punjab region c Ganeriwala in the Cholistan Desert d Dholavira in western Gujarat declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2021 as Dholavira A Harappan City and e Rakhigarhi in Haryana 17 h The Harappan language is not directly attested and its affiliation uncertain as the Indus script has remained undeciphered 18 A relationship with the Dravidian or Elamo Dravidian language family is favoured by a section of scholars 19 20 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Extent 3 Discovery and history of excavation 4 Chronology 5 Pre Harappan era Mehrgarh 6 Early Harappan 7 Mature Harappan 7 1 Cities 7 2 Authority and governance 7 3 Metallurgy 7 4 Metrology 7 5 Arts and crafts 7 5 1 Human statuettes 7 5 2 Seals 7 6 Trade and transportation 7 7 Agriculture 7 8 Food 7 9 Language 7 10 Possible writing system 7 11 Religion 8 Late Harappan 8 1 Aryan migration 8 2 Climate change and drought 8 3 Continuity and coexistence 9 Post Harappan 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology EditThe Indus civilisation is named after the Indus river system in whose alluvial plains the early sites of the civilisation were identified and excavated 21 i Following a tradition in archaeology the civilisation is sometimes referred to as the Harappan after its type site Harappa the first site to be excavated in the 1920s this is notably true of usage employed by the Archaeological Survey of India after India s independence in 1947 22 j The term Ghaggar Hakra figures prominently in modern labels applied to the Indus civilisation on account of a good number of sites having been found along the Ghaggar Hakra River in northwest India and eastern Pakistan 23 The terms Indus Sarasvati Civilisation and Sindhu Saraswati Civilisation have also been employed in the literature after a posited identification of the Ghaggar Hakra with the river Saraswati described in the early chapters of Rigveda a collection of hymns in archaic Sanskrit composed in the second millennium BCE 24 25 Recent geophysical research suggests that unlike the Sarasvati whose descriptions in the Rig Veda are those of a snow fed river the Ghaggar Hakra was a system of perennial monsoon fed rivers which became seasonal around the time that the civilisation diminished approximately 4 000 years ago 4 k Extent Edit Major sites and extent of the Indus Valley Civilisation The Indus Valley Civilisation was roughly contemporary with the other riverine civilisations of the ancient world Ancient Egypt along the Nile Mesopotamia in the lands watered by the Euphrates and the Tigris and China in the drainage basin of the Yellow River and the Yangtze By the time of its mature phase the civilisation had spread over an area larger than the others which included a core of 1 500 kilometres 900 mi up the alluvial plain of the Indus and its tributaries In addition there was a region with disparate flora fauna and habitats up to ten times as large which had been shaped culturally and economically by the Indus 26 l Around 6500 BCE agriculture emerged in Balochistan on the margins of the Indus alluvium 27 m 28 n In the following millennia settled life made inroads into the Indus plains setting the stage for the growth of rural and urban human settlements 29 o The more organized sedentary life in turn led to a net increase in the birth rate 27 p The large urban centres of Mohenjo daro and Harappa very likely grew to containing between 30 000 and 60 000 individuals and during the civilisation s florescence the population of the subcontinent grew to between 4 6 million people 27 q During this period the death rate increased as well for close living conditions of humans and domesticated animals led to an increase in contagious diseases 28 r According to one estimate the population of the Indus civilisation at its peak may have been between one and five million 30 s The civilisation extended from Pakistan s Balochistan in the west to India s western Uttar Pradesh in the east from northeastern Afghanistan in the north to India s Gujarat state in the south 24 The largest number of sites are in Gujarat Haryana Punjab Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh Jammu and Kashmir states in India 24 and Sindh Punjab and Balochistan provinces in Pakistan 24 Coastal settlements extended from Sutkagan Dor 31 in Western Baluchistan to Lothal 32 in Gujarat An Indus Valley site has been found on the Oxus River at Shortugai in northern Afghanistan 33 in the Gomal River valley in northwestern Pakistan 34 at Manda Jammu on the Beas River near Jammu 35 India and at Alamgirpur on the Hindon River only 28 km 17 mi from Delhi 36 The southernmost site of the Indus Valley Civilisation is Daimabad in Maharashtra Indus Valley sites have been found most often on rivers but also on the ancient seacoast 37 for example Balakot Kot Bala 38 and on islands for example Dholavira 39 Discovery and history of excavation Edit Alexander Cunningham the first director general of the Archaeological Survey of India ASI interpreted a Harappan stamp seal in 1875 R D Banerji an officer of the ASI visited Mohenjo daro in 1919 1920 and again in 1922 1923 postulating the site s far off antiquity John Marshall the director general of the ASI from 1902 to 1928 who oversaw the excavations in Harappa and Mohenjo daro shown in a 1906 photograph Three other scholars whose names I cannot pass over in silence are the late Mr R D Banerji to whom belongs the credit of having discovered if not Mohenjo daro itself at any rate its high antiquity and his immediate successors in the task of excavation Messrs M S Vats and K N Dikshit no one probably except myself can fully appreciate the difficulties and hardships which they had to face in the three first seasons at Mohenjo daro From John Marshall ed Mohenjo daro and the Indus Civilization London Arthur Probsthain 1931 40 The first modern accounts of the ruins of the Indus civilisation are those of Charles Masson a deserter from the East India Company s army 41 In 1829 Masson traveled through the princely state of Punjab gathering useful intelligence for the Company in return for a promise of clemency 41 An aspect of this arrangement was the additional requirement to hand over to the Company any historical artifacts acquired during his travels Masson who had versed himself in the classics especially in the military campaigns of Alexander the Great chose for his wanderings some of the same towns that had featured in Alexander s campaigns and whose archaeological sites had been noted by the campaign s chroniclers 41 Masson s major archaeological discovery in the Punjab was Harappa a metropolis of the Indus civilisation in the valley of Indus s tributary the Ravi river Masson made copious notes and illustrations of Harappa s rich historical artifacts many lying half buried In 1842 Masson included his observations of Harappa in the book Narrative of Various Journeys in Baluchistan Afghanistan and the Punjab He dated the Harappa ruins to a period of recorded history erroneously mistaking it to have been described earlier during Alexander s campaign 41 Masson was impressed by the site s extraordinary size and by several large mounds formed from long existing erosion 41 t Two years later the Company contracted Alexander Burnes to sail up the Indus to assess the feasibility of water travel for its army 41 Burnes who also stopped in Harappa noted the baked bricks employed in the site s ancient masonry but noted also the haphazard plundering of these bricks by the local population 41 Despite these reports Harappa was raided even more perilously for its bricks after the British annexation of the Punjab in 1848 49 A considerable number were carted away as track ballast for the railway lines being laid in the Punjab 43 Nearly 160 km 100 mi of railway track between Multan and Lahore laid in the mid 1850s was supported by Harappan bricks 43 In 1861 three years after the dissolution of the East India Company and the establishment of Crown rule in India archaeology on the subcontinent became more formally organised with the founding of the Archaeological Survey of India ASI 44 Alexander Cunningham the Survey s first director general who had visited Harappa in 1853 and had noted the imposing brick walls visited again to carry out a survey but this time of a site whose entire upper layer had been stripped in the interim 44 45 Although his original goal of demonstrating Harappa to be a lost Buddhist city mentioned in the seventh century CE travels of the Chinese visitor Xuanzang proved elusive 45 Cunningham did publish his findings in 1875 46 For the first time he interpreted a Harappan stamp seal with its unknown script which he concluded to be of an origin foreign to India 46 47 Archaeological work in Harappa thereafter lagged until a new viceroy of India Lord Curzon pushed through the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act 1904 and appointed John Marshall to lead the ASI 48 Several years later Hiranand Sastri who had been assigned by Marshall to survey Harappa reported it to be of non Buddhist origin and by implication more ancient 48 Expropriating Harappa for the ASI under the Act Marshall directed ASI archaeologist Daya Ram Sahni to excavate the site s two mounds 48 Farther south along the main stem of the Indus in Sind province the largely undisturbed site of Mohenjo daro had attracted notice 48 Marshall deputed a succession of ASI officers to survey the site These included D R Bhandarkar 1911 R D Banerji 1919 1922 1923 and M S Vats 1924 49 In 1923 on his second visit to Mohenjo daro Baneriji wrote to Marshall about the site postulating an origin in remote antiquity and noting a congruence of some of its artifacts with those of Harappa 50 Later in 1923 Vats also in correspondence with Marshall noted the same more specifically about the seals and the script found at both sites 50 On the weight of these opinions Marshall ordered crucial data from the two sites to be brought to one location and invited Banerji and Sahni to a joint discussion 51 By 1924 Marshall had become convinced of the significance of the finds and on 24 September 1924 made a tentative but conspicuous public intimation in the Illustrated London News 21 Not often has it been given to archaeologists as it was given to Schliemann at Tiryns and Mycenae or to Stein in the deserts of Turkestan to light upon the remains of a long forgotten civilisation It looks however at this moment as if we were on the threshold of such a discovery in the plains of the Indus In the next issue a week later the British Assyriologist Archibald Sayce was able to point to very similar seals found in Bronze Age levels in Mesopotamia and Iran giving the first strong indication of their date confirmations from other archaeologists followed 52 Systematic excavations began in Mohenjo daro in 1924 25 with that of K N Dikshit continuing with those of H Hargreaves 1925 1926 and Ernest J H Mackay 1927 1931 49 By 1931 much of Mohenjo daro had been excavated but occasional excavations continued such as the one led by Mortimer Wheeler a new director general of the ASI appointed in 1944 and including Ahmad Hasan Dani 53 After the partition of India in 1947 when most excavated sites of the Indus Valley Civilisation lay in territory awarded to Pakistan the Archaeological Survey of India its area of authority reduced carried out large numbers of surveys and excavations along the Ghaggar Hakra system in India 54 u Some speculated that the Ghaggar Hakra system might yield more sites than the Indus river basin 55 According to archaeologist Ratnagar many Ghaggar Hakra sites in India and Indus Valley sites in Pakistan are actually those of local cultures some sites display contact with Harappan civilisation but only a few are fully developed Harappan ones 56 As of 1977 about 90 of the Indus script seals and inscribed objects discovered were found at sites in Pakistan along the Indus river while other sites accounts only for the remaining 10 v 57 58 By 2002 over 1 000 Mature Harappan cities and settlements had been reported of which just under a hundred had been excavated 13 14 15 59 mainly in the general region of the Indus and Ghaggar Hakra rivers and their tributaries however there are only five major urban sites Harappa Mohenjo daro Dholavira Ganeriwala and Rakhigarhi 59 As of 2008 about 616 sites have been reported in India 24 whereas 406 sites have been reported in Pakistan 24 Unlike India in which after 1947 the ASI attempted to Indianise archaeological work in keeping with the new nation s goals of national unity and historical continuity in Pakistan the national imperative was the promotion of Islamic heritage and consequently archaeological work on early sites was left to foreign archaeologists 60 After the partition Mortimer Wheeler the Director of ASI from 1944 oversaw the establishment of archaeological institutions in Pakistan later joining a UNESCO effort tasked to conserve the site at Mohenjo daro 61 Other international efforts at Mohenjo daro and Harappa have included the German Aachen Research Project Mohenjo daro the Italian Mission to Mohenjo daro and the US Harappa Archaeological Research Project HARP founded by George F Dales 62 Following a chance flash flood which exposed a portion of an archaeological site at the foot of the Bolan Pass in Balochistan excavations were carried out in Mehrgarh by French archaeologist Jean Francois Jarrige and his team in the early 1970s 63 Chronology EditMain article Periodisation of the Indus Valley Civilisation The cities of the ancient Indus had social hierarchies their writing system their large planned cities and their long distance trade which mark them to archaeologists as a full fledged civilisation 64 The mature phase of the Harappan civilisation lasted from c 2600 1900 BCE With the inclusion of the predecessor and successor cultures Early Harappan and Late Harappan respectively the entire Indus Valley Civilisation may be taken to have lasted from the 33rd to the 14th centuries BCE It is part of the Indus Valley Tradition which also includes the pre Harappan occupation of Mehrgarh the earliest farming site of the Indus Valley 8 65 Several periodisations are employed for the IVC 8 65 The most commonly used classifies the Indus Valley Civilisation into Early Mature and Late Harappan Phase 66 An alternative approach by Shaffer divides the broader Indus Valley Tradition into four eras the pre Harappan Early Food Producing Era and the Regionalisation Integration and Localisation eras which correspond roughly with the Early Harappan Mature Harappan and Late Harappan phases 7 67 Dates BCE Main phase Mehrgarh phases Harappan phases Post Harappan phases Era7000 5500 Pre Harappan Mehrgarh I and Bhirrana aceramic Neolithic Early Food Producing Era5500 3300 Pre Harappan Early Harappan 68 Mehrgarh II VI ceramic Neolithic Regionalisation Erac 4000 2500 2300 Shaffer 69 c 5000 3200 Coningham amp Young 70 3300 2800 Early Harappan 68 c 3300 2800 Mughal 71 68 72 c 5000 2800 Kenoyer 68 Harappan 1 Ravi Phase Hakra Ware 2800 2600 Mehrgarh VII Harappan 2 Kot Diji Phase Nausharo I 2600 2450 Mature Harappan Indus Valley Civilisation Harappan 3A Nausharo II Integration Era2450 2200 Harappan 3B2200 1900 Harappan 3C1900 1700 Late Harappan Harappan 4 Cemetery H 73 Ochre Coloured Pottery 73 Localisation Era1700 1300 Harappan 51300 600 Post HarappanIron Age India Painted Grey Ware 1200 600 Vedic period c 1500 500 Regionalisationc 1200 300 Kenoyer 68 c 1500 74 600 Coningham amp Young 75 600 300 Northern Black Polished Ware Iron Age 700 200 Second urbanisation c 500 200 Integration 75 Pre Harappan era Mehrgarh EditMain article Mehrgarh See also Neolithic Revolution Mehrgarh is a Neolithic 7000 BCE to c 2500 BCE mountain site in the Balochistan province of Pakistan 76 which gave new insights on the emergence of the Indus Valley Civilisation 64 w Mehrgarh is one of the earliest sites with evidence of farming and herding in South Asia 77 78 Mehrgarh was influenced by the Near Eastern Neolithic 79 with similarities between domesticated wheat varieties early phases of farming pottery other archaeological artefacts some domesticated plants and herd animals 80 x Jean Francois Jarrige argues for an independent origin of Mehrgarh Jarrige notes the assumption that farming economy was introduced full fledged from Near East to South Asia 81 x y z and the similarities between Neolithic sites from eastern Mesopotamia and the western Indus valley which are evidence of a cultural continuum between those sites But given the originality of Mehrgarh Jarrige concludes that Mehrgarh has an earlier local background and is not a backwater of the Neolithic culture of the Near East 81 Lukacs and Hemphill suggest an initial local development of Mehrgarh with a continuity in cultural development but a change in population According to Lukacs and Hemphill while there is a strong continuity between the neolithic and chalcolithic Copper Age cultures of Mehrgarh dental evidence shows that the chalcolithic population did not descend from the neolithic population of Mehrgarh 95 which suggests moderate levels of gene flow 95 aa Mascarenhas et al 2015 note that new possibly West Asian body types are reported from the graves of Mehrgarh beginning in the Togau phase 3800 BCE 96 Gallego Romero et al 2011 state that their research on lactose tolerance in India suggests that the west Eurasian genetic contribution identified by Reich et al 2009 principally reflects gene flow from Iran and the Middle East 97 They further note that t he earliest evidence of cattle herding in south Asia comes from the Indus River Valley site of Mehrgarh and is dated to 7 000 YBP 97 ab Early Harappan Edit Early Harappan Period c 3300 2600 BCE Terracotta boat in the shape of a bull and female figurines Kot Diji period c 2800 2600 BC The Early Harappan Ravi Phase named after the nearby Ravi River lasted from c 3300 BCE until 2800 BCE It started when farmers from the mountains gradually moved between their mountain homes and the lowland river valleys 99 and is related to the Hakra Phase identified in the Ghaggar Hakra River Valley to the west and predates the Kot Diji Phase 2800 2600 BCE Harappan 2 named after a site in northern Sindh Pakistan near Mohenjo daro The earliest examples of the Indus script date to the 3rd millennium BCE 100 101 The mature phase of earlier village cultures is represented by Rehman Dheri and Amri in Pakistan 102 Kot Diji represents the phase leading up to Mature Harappan with the citadel representing centralised authority and an increasingly urban quality of life Another town of this stage was found at Kalibangan in India on the Hakra River 103 Trade networks linked this culture with related regional cultures and distant sources of raw materials including lapis lazuli and other materials for bead making By this time villagers had domesticated numerous crops including peas sesame seeds dates and cotton as well as animals including the water buffalo Early Harappan communities turned to large urban centres by 2600 BCE from where the mature Harappan phase started The latest research shows that Indus Valley people migrated from villages to cities 104 105 The final stages of the Early Harappan period are characterised by the building of large walled settlements the expansion of trade networks and the increasing integration of regional communities into a relatively uniform material culture in terms of pottery styles ornaments and stamp seals with Indus script leading into the transition to the Mature Harappan phase 106 Mature Harappan Edit Mature Harappan Period c 2600 1900 BCE Mature Harappan View of Granary and Great Hall on Mound F in Harappa Archaeological remains of washroom drainage system at Lothal Dholavira in Gujarat India is one of the largest cities of Indus Valley civilisation with stepwell steps to reach the water level in artificially constructed reservoirs 107 According to Giosan et al 2012 the slow southward migration of the monsoons across Asia initially allowed the Indus Valley villages to develop by taming the floods of the Indus and its tributaries Flood supported farming led to large agricultural surpluses which in turn supported the development of cities The IVC residents did not develop irrigation capabilities relying mainly on the seasonal monsoons leading to summer floods 4 Brooke further notes that the development of advanced cities coincides with a reduction in rainfall which may have triggered a reorganisation into larger urban centres 108 e According to J G Shaffer and D A Lichtenstein 109 the Mature Harappan civilisation was a fusion of the Bagor Hakra and Kot Diji traditions or ethnic groups in the Ghaggar Hakra valley on the borders of India and Pakistan 110 Also according to a more recent summary by Maisels 2003 The Harappan oecumene formed from a Kot Dijian Amri Nal synthesis He also says that in the development of complexity the site of Mohenjo daro has priority along with the Hakra Ghaggar cluster of sites where Hakra wares actually precede the Kot Diji related material He sees these areas as catalytic in producing the fusion from Hakra Kot Dijian and Amri Nal cultural elements that resulted in the gestalt we recognize as Early Harappan Early Indus 111 By 2600 BCE the Early Harappan communities turned into large urban centres Such urban centres include Harappa Ganeriwala Mohenjo daro in modern day Pakistan and Dholavira Kalibangan Rakhigarhi Rupar and Lothal in modern day India 112 In total more than 1 000 cities and settlements have been found mainly in the general region of the Indus and Ghaggar Hakra Rivers and their tributaries 13 Cities Edit Main article Harappan architecture A sophisticated and technologically advanced urban culture is evident in the Indus Valley Civilisation making them the first urban centre in the region The quality of municipal town planning suggests the knowledge of urban planning and efficient municipal governments which placed a high priority on hygiene or alternatively accessibility to the means of religious ritual 113 As seen in Harappa Mohenjo daro and the recently partially excavated Rakhigarhi this urban plan included the world s first known urban sanitation systems Within the city individual homes or groups of homes obtained water from wells From a room that appears to have been set aside for bathing waste water was directed to covered drains which lined the major streets Houses opened only to inner courtyards and smaller lanes The housebuilding in some villages in the region still resembles in some respects the housebuilding of the Harappans ac The ancient Indus systems of sewerage and drainage that were developed and used in cities throughout the Indus region were far more advanced than any found in contemporary urban sites in the Middle East and even more efficient than those in many areas of Pakistan and India today The advanced architecture of the Harappans is shown by their impressive dockyards granaries warehouses brick platforms and protective walls The massive walls of Indus cities most likely protected the Harappans from floods and may have dissuaded military conflicts 115 The purpose of the citadel remains debated In sharp contrast to this civilisation s contemporaries Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt no large monumental structures were built There is no conclusive evidence of palaces or temples 116 Some structures are thought to have been granaries Found at one city is an enormous well built bath the Great Bath which may have been a public bath Although the citadels were walled it is far from clear that these structures were defensive Most city dwellers appear to have been traders or artisans who lived with others pursuing the same occupation in well defined neighbourhoods Materials from distant regions were used in the cities for constructing seals beads and other objects Among the artefacts discovered were beautiful glazed faience beads Steatite seals have images of animals people perhaps gods and other types of inscriptions including the yet un deciphered writing system of the Indus Valley Civilisation Some of the seals were used to stamp clay on trade goods Although some houses were larger than others Indus civilisation cities were remarkable for their apparent if relative egalitarianism All the houses had access to water and drainage facilities This gives the impression of a society with relatively low wealth concentration 117 Authority and governance Edit Archaeological records provide no immediate answers for a centre of power or for depictions of people in power in Harappan society But there are indications of complex decisions being taken and implemented For instance the majority of the cities were constructed in a highly uniform and well planned grid pattern suggesting they were planned by a central authority extraordinary uniformity of Harappan artefacts as evident in pottery seals weights and bricks 118 presence of public facilities and monumental architecture 119 heterogeneity in the mortuary symbolism and in grave goods items included in burials citation needed These are some major theories citation needed There was a single state given the similarity in artefacts the evidence for planned settlements the standardised ratio of brick size and the establishment of settlements near sources of raw material There was no single ruler but several cities like Mohenjo daro had a separate ruler Harappa another and so forth Society in the Indus Valley Civilisation was egalitarian 120 Metallurgy Edit Harappans evolved some new techniques in metallurgy and produced copper bronze lead and tin citation needed A touchstone bearing gold streaks was found in Banawali which was probably used for testing the purity of gold such a technique is still used in some parts of India 110 Metrology Edit Harappan weights found in the Indus Valley National Museum New Delhi 121 Further information Indian mathematics Prehistory The people of the Indus civilisation achieved great accuracy in measuring length mass and time They were among the first to develop a system of uniform weights and measures dubious discuss A comparison of available objects indicates large scale variation across the Indus territories Their smallest division which is marked on an ivory scale found in Lothal in Gujarat was approximately 1 704 mm the smallest division ever recorded on a scale of the Bronze Age citation needed Harappan engineers followed the decimal division of measurement for all practical purposes including the measurement of mass as revealed by their hexahedron weights citation needed These chert weights were in a ratio of 5 2 1 with weights of 0 05 0 1 0 2 0 5 1 2 5 10 20 50 100 200 and 500 units with each unit weighing approximately 28 grams similar to the English Imperial ounce or Greek uncia and smaller objects were weighed in similar ratios with the units of 0 871 However as in other cultures actual weights were not uniform throughout the area The weights and measures later used in Kautilya s Arthashastra 4th century BCE are the same as those used in Lothal 122 Arts and crafts Edit See also Pottery in the Indian subcontinent Various sculptures seals bronze vessels pottery gold jewellery and anatomically detailed figurines in terracotta bronze and steatite have been found at excavation sites 123 The Harappans also made various toys and games among them cubical dice with one to six holes on the faces which were found in sites like Mohenjo daro 124 The terracotta figurines included cows bears monkeys and dogs The animal depicted on a majority of seals at sites of the mature period has not been clearly identified Part bull part zebra with a majestic horn it has been a source of speculation As yet there is insufficient evidence to substantiate claims that the image had religious or cultic significance but the prevalence of the image raises the question of whether or not the animals in images of the IVC are religious symbols 125 Many crafts including shell working ceramics and agate and glazed steatite bead making were practised and the pieces were used in the making of necklaces bangles and other ornaments from all phases of Harappan culture Some of these crafts are still practised in the subcontinent today 119 Some make up and toiletry items a special kind of combs kakai the use of collyrium and a special three in one toiletry gadget that were found in Harappan contexts still have similar counterparts in modern India 126 Terracotta female figurines were found c 2800 2600 BCE which had red colour applied to the manga line of partition of the hair 126 The finds from Mohenjo daro were initially deposited in the Lahore Museum but later moved to the ASI headquarters at New Delhi where a new Central Imperial Museum was being planned for the new capital of the British Raj in which at least a selection would be displayed It became apparent that Indian independence was approaching but the Partition of India was not anticipated until late in the process The new Pakistani authorities requested the return of the Mohenjo daro pieces excavated on their territory but the Indian authorities refused Eventually an agreement was reached whereby the finds totalling some 12 000 objects most sherds of pottery were split equally between the countries in some cases this was taken very literally with some necklaces and girdles having their beads separated into two piles In the case of the two most celebrated sculpted figures Pakistan asked for and received the so called Priest King figure while India retained the much smaller Dancing Girl 127 Though written considerably later the arts treatise Natya Shastra c 200 BCE 200 CE classifies musical instruments into four groups based on their means of acoustical production strings membranes solid materials and air and it is probable that such instruments had existed since the IVC 128 Archeological evidence indicates the use of simple rattles and vessel flutes while iconographical evidence suggests early harps and drums were also used 129 An ideogram in the IVC contains the earliest known depiction of an arched harp dated sometime before 1800 BCE 130 Ceremonial vessel 2600 2450 BC terracotta with black paint 49 53 25 4 cm Los Angeles County Museum of Art US Cubical weights standardised throughout the Indus cultural zone 2600 1900 BC chert British Museum London Mohenjo daro beads 2600 1900 BC carnelian and terracotta British Museum Ram headed bird mounted on wheels probably a toy 2600 1900 BC terracotta Guimet Museum Paris Human statuettes Edit Further information Dancing Girl sculpture A handful of realistic statuettes have been found at IVC sites of which much the most famous is the lost wax casting bronze statuette of a slender limbed Dancing Girl adorned with bangles found in Mohenjo daro Two other realistic incomplete statuettes have been found in Harappa in proper stratified excavations which display near Classical treatment of the human shape the statuette of a dancer who seems to be male and the Hapappa Torso a red jasper male torso both now in the Delhi National Museum Sir John Marshall reacted with surprise when he saw these two statuettes from Harappa 131 When I first saw them I found it difficult to believe that they were prehistoric they seemed to completely upset all established ideas about early art and culture Modelling such as this was unknown in the ancient world up to the Hellenistic age of Greece and I thought therefore that some mistake must surely have been made that these figures had found their way into levels some 3000 years older than those to which they properly belonged Now in these statuettes it is just this anatomical truth which is so startling that makes us wonder whether in this all important matter Greek artistry could possibly have been anticipated by the sculptors of a far off age on the banks of the Indus 131 These statuettes remain controversial due to their advanced style in representing the human body Regarding the red jasper torso the discoverer Vats claims a Harappan date but Marshall considered this statuette is probably historical dating to the Gupta period comparing it to the much later Lohanipur torso 132 A second rather similar grey stone torso of a dancing male was also found about 150 meters away in a secure Mature Harappan stratum Overall anthropologist Gregory Possehl tends to consider that these statuettes probably form the pinnacle of Indus art during the Mature Harappan period 133 Reclining mouflon 2600 1900 BC marble length 28 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City The Priest King 2400 1900 BC low fired steatite height 17 5 cm National Museum of Pakistan Karachi Male dancing torso 2400 1900 BC limestone height 9 9 cm National Museum New Delhi The Dancing Girl 2400 1900 BC bronze height 10 8 cm National Museum New Delhi Seals Edit Stamp seals and right impressions some of them with Indus script probably made of steatite British Museum London Thousands of steatite seals have been recovered and their physical character is fairly consistent In size they range from squares of side 2 to 4 cm 3 4 to 1 1 2 in In most cases they have a pierced boss at the back to accommodate a cord for handling or for use as personal adornment In addition a large number of sealings have survived of which only a few can be matched to the seals The great majority of examples of the Indus script are short groups of signs on seals 134 Seals have been found at Mohenjo daro depicting a figure standing on its head and another on the Pashupati seal sitting cross legged in what some who call a yoga like pose see image the so called Pashupati below This figure has been variously identified Sir John Marshall identified a resemblance to the Hindu god Shiva 135 A human deity with the horns hooves and tail of a bull also appears in the seals in particular in a fighting scene with a horned tiger like beast This deity has been compared to the Mesopotamian bull man Enkidu 136 137 138 Several seals also show a man fighting two lions or tigers a Master of Animals motif common to civilisations in Western and South Asia 138 139 Seal 3000 1500 BC baked steatite 2 2 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Stamp seal and modern impression unicorn and incense burner 2600 1900 BC burnt steatite 3 8 3 8 1 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art Seal with two horned bull and inscription 2010 BC steatite overall 3 2 x 3 2 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Ohio US Seal with unicorn and inscription 2010 BC steatite overall 3 5 x 3 6 cm Cleveland Museum of ArtTrade and transportation Edit Further information Lothal and Meluhha Archaeological discoveries suggest that trade routes between Mesopotamia and the Indus were active during the 3rd millennium BCE leading to the development of Indus Mesopotamia relations 140 Boat with direction finding birds to find land 141 142 Model of Mohenjo daro tablet 2500 1750 BCE National Museum New Delhi 143 144 Flat bottomed river row boats appear in two Indus seals but their seaworthiness is debatable 145 IVC may have had bullock carts identical to those seen throughout South Asia today as well as boats Most of these boats were probably small flat bottomed craft perhaps driven by sail similar to those one can see on the Indus River today An extensive canal network used for irrigation has however also been discovered by H P Francfort 146 During 4300 3200 BCE of the chalcolithic period copper age the Indus Valley Civilisation area shows ceramic similarities with southern Turkmenistan and northern Iran which suggest considerable mobility and trade During the Early Harappan period about 3200 2600 BCE similarities in pottery seals figurines ornaments etc document intensive caravan trade with Central Asia and the Iranian plateau 147 Judging from the dispersal of Indus civilisation artefacts the trade networks economically integrated a huge area including portions of Afghanistan the coastal regions of Persia northern and western India and Mesopotamia leading to the development of Indus Mesopotamia relations Studies of tooth enamel from individuals buried at Harappa suggest that some residents had migrated to the city from beyond the Indus Valley 148 Ancient DNA studies of graves at Bronze Age sites at Gonur Depe Turkmenistan and Shahr e Sukhteh Iran have identified 11 individuals of South Asian descent who are presumed to be of mature Indus Valley origin 149 There was an extensive maritime trade network operating between the Harappan and Mesopotamian civilisations as early as the middle Harappan Phase with much commerce being handled by middlemen merchants from Dilmun modern Bahrain Eastern Arabia and Failaka located in the Persian Gulf 150 Such long distance sea trade became feasible with the development of plank built watercraft equipped with a single central mast supporting a sail of woven rushes or cloth 151 However the evidence of sea borne trade involving the Harappan civilisation is not firm In their book Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan archaeologists Bridget Allchin and Raymond Allchin write p 173 the settlement at Lothal along the east side was a brick basin It is claimed by its excavator to have been a dockyard connected by channels to a neighbouring estuary On its edge the excavator discovered several heavily pierced stones similar to modern anchor stones employed by traditional seafaring communities of Western India This interpretation however has been challenged and indeed the published levels of the basin and its entrance relative to the modern sea level seem to argue against it Leshnik has cogently suggested that it was a tank for the reception of sweet water channelled from higher ground inland to an area where the local water supplies were anciently as still today saline We regard either interpretation as still unproven but favour the latter p 188 189 The discussion of trade focuses attention upon methods of transport Several representations of ships are found on seals and graffiti at Harappa Mohenjo daro Figs 7 15 7 16 etc and a terracotta model of a ship with a stick impressed socket for the mast and eyeholes for fixing rigging comes from Lothal We have already seen above that the great brick tank interpreted by Rao as a dock at Lothal cannot yet be certainly identified The evidence of sea trade and contact during the Harappan period is largely circumstantial or derived from inferences from the Mesopotamian texts as detailed above Figure 7 15 had caption Mohenjo daro representation of ship on a stone seal length 4 3 cm after Mackay Figure 7 16 Mohenjo daro representation of ship on terracotta amulet length 4 5 cm after Dales And Daniel T Potts writes It is generally assumed that most trade between the Indus Valley ancient Meluhha and western neighbors proceeded up the Persian Gulf rather than overland Although there is no incontrovertible proof that this was indeed the case the distribution of Indus type artifacts on the Oman peninsula on Bahrain and in southern Mesopotamia makes it plausible that a series of maritime stages linked the Indus Valley and the Gulf region If this is accepted then the presence of etched carnelian beads a Harappan style cubical stone weight and a Harappan style cylinder seal at Susa Amiet 1986a Figs 92 94 may be evidence of maritime trade between Susa and the Indus Valley in the late 3rd millennium BCE On the other hand given that similar finds particularly etched carnelian beads are attested at landlocked sites including Tepe Hissar Tappe Heṣar Shah Tepe Sah Tappe Kalleh Nisar Kalla Nisar Jalalabad Jalalabad Marlik Marlik and Tepe Yahya Tappe Yaḥya Possehl 1996 pp 153 54 other mechanisms including overland traffic by peddlers or caravans may account for their presence at Susa 152 In the 1980s important archaeological discoveries were made at Ras al Jinz Oman demonstrating maritime Indus Valley connections with the Arabian Peninsula 151 153 154 Agriculture Edit According to Gangal et al 2014 there is strong archeological and geographical evidence that neolithic farming spread from the Near East into north west India but there is also good evidence for the local domestication of barley and the zebu cattle at Mehrgarh 79 ad According to Jean Francois Jarrige farming had an independent local origin at Mehrgarh which he argues is not merely a backwater of the Neolithic culture of the Near East despite similarities between Neolithic sites from eastern Mesopotamia and the western Indus valley which are evidence of a cultural continuum between those sites 81 Archaeologist Jim G Shaffer writes that the Mehrgarh site demonstrates that food production was an indigenous South Asian phenomenon and that the data support interpretation of the prehistoric urbanisation and complex social organisation in South Asia as based on indigenous but not isolated cultural developments 155 Jarrige notes that the people of Mehrgarh used domesticated wheats and barley 156 while Shaffer and Liechtenstein note that the major cultivated cereal crop was naked six row barley a crop derived from two row barley 157 Gangal agrees that Neolithic domesticated crops in Mehrgarh include more than 90 barley noting that there is good evidence for the local domestication of barley Yet Gangal also notes that the crop also included a small amount of wheat which are suggested to be of Near Eastern origin as the modern distribution of wild varieties of wheat is limited to Northern Levant and Southern Turkey 79 ae The cattle that are often portrayed on Indus seals are humped Indian aurochs Bos primigenius namadicus which are similar to Zebu cattle Zebu cattle is still common in India and in Africa It is different from the European cattle Bos primigenius taurus and are believed to have been independently domesticated on the Indian subcontinent probably in the Baluchistan region of Pakistan 158 79 ad Research by J Bates et al 2016 confirms that Indus populations were the earliest people to use complex multi cropping strategies across both seasons growing foods during summer rice millets and beans and winter wheat barley and pulses which required different watering regimes 159 Bates et al 2016 also found evidence for an entirely separate domestication process of rice in ancient South Asia based around the wild species Oryza nivara This led to the local development of a mix of wetland and dryland agriculture of local Oryza sativa indica rice agriculture before the truly wetland rice Oryza sativa japonica arrived around 2000 BCE 160 Food Edit According to archeological finds Indus valley civilization had dominance of meat diet of animals such as cattle buffalo goat pig and chicken 161 162 Remnants of dairy products were also discovered According to Akshyeta Suryanarayan et al af available evidence indicates culinary practices to be common over the region food constituents were dairy products in low proportion ruminant carcass meat and either non ruminant adipose fats plants or mixtures of these products 163 The dietary pattern remained same throughout the decline 163 Seven food balls laddus were found in intact form along with two figurines of bulls and a hand held copper adze during excavations in 2017 from western Rajasthan 164 Dated to about 2600 BCE they were likely composed of legumes primarily mung and cereals 164 The authors speculated the food balls to be of a ritualistic significance given the founds of bull figurines adze and a seal in immediate vicinity 164 165 Language Edit See also Substratum in Vedic Sanskrit Harappan language and Origins of Dravidian peoples It has often been suggested that the bearers of the IVC corresponded to proto Dravidians linguistically the break up of proto Dravidian corresponding to the break up of the Late Harappan culture 166 Finnish Indologist Asko Parpola concludes that the uniformity of the Indus inscriptions precludes any possibility of widely different languages being used and that an early form of Dravidian language must have been the language of the Indus people 167 Today the Dravidian language family is concentrated mostly in southern India and northern and eastern Sri Lanka but pockets of it still remain throughout the rest of India and Pakistan the Brahui language which lends credence to the theory According to Heggarty and Renfrew Dravidian languages may have spread into the Indian subcontinent with the spread of farming 168 According to David McAlpin the Dravidian languages were brought to India by immigration into India from Elam ag In earlier publications Renfrew also stated that proto Dravidian was brought to India by farmers from the Iranian part of the Fertile Crescent 169 170 171 ah but more recently Heggarty and Renfrew note that a great deal remains to be done in elucidating the prehistory of Dravidian They also note that McAlpin s analysis of the language data and thus his claims remain far from orthodoxy 168 Heggarty and Renfrew conclude that several scenarios are compatible with the data and that the linguistic jury is still very much out 168 aj In a 2021 study Bahata Ansumali Mukhopadhyay presented a linguistic analysis to posit a Proto Dravidian presence in the ancient Indus area using Dravidian root words for tooth toothbrush and elephant in various contemporary ancient civilisations 176 Possible writing system Edit Main article Indus script Ten Indus characters from the northern gate of Dholavira dubbed the Dholavira signboard Between 400 and as many as 600 distinct Indus symbols 177 have been found on stamp seals small tablets ceramic pots and more than a dozen other materials including a signboard that apparently once hung over the gate of the inner citadel of the Indus city of Dholavira Typical Indus inscriptions are around five characters in length 178 most of which aside from the Dholavira signboard are tiny the longest on any single object inscribed on a copper plate 179 has a length of 34 symbols While the Indus Valley Civilisation is generally characterised as a literate society on the evidence of these inscriptions this description has been challenged by Farmer Sproat and Witzel 2004 180 who argue that the Indus system did not encode language but was instead similar to a variety of non linguistic sign systems used extensively in the Near East and other societies to symbolise families clans gods and religious concepts Others have claimed on occasion that the symbols were exclusively used for economic transactions but this claim leaves unexplained the appearance of Indus symbols on many ritual objects many of which were mass produced in moulds No parallels to these mass produced inscriptions are known in any other early ancient civilisations 181 In a 2009 study by P N Rao et al published in Science computer scientists comparing the pattern of symbols to various linguistic scripts and non linguistic systems including DNA and a computer programming language found that the Indus script s pattern is closer to that of spoken words supporting the hypothesis that it codes for an as yet unknown language 182 183 Farmer Sproat and Witzel have disputed this finding pointing out that Rao et al did not actually compare the Indus signs with real world non linguistic systems but rather with two wholly artificial systems invented by the authors one consisting of 200 000 randomly ordered signs and another of 200 000 fully ordered signs that they spuriously claim represent the structures of all real world non linguistic sign systems 184 Farmer et al have also demonstrated that a comparison of a non linguistic system like medieval heraldic signs with natural languages yields results similar to those that Rao et al obtained with Indus signs They conclude that the method used by Rao et al cannot distinguish linguistic systems from non linguistic ones 185 The messages on the seals have proved to be too short to be decoded by a computer Each seal has a distinctive combination of symbols and there are too few examples of each sequence to provide a sufficient context The symbols that accompany the images vary from seal to seal making it impossible to derive a meaning for the symbols from the images There have nonetheless been a number of interpretations offered for the meaning of the seals These interpretations have been marked by ambiguity and subjectivity 185 69 Photos of many of the thousands of extant inscriptions are published in the Corpus of Indus Seals and Inscriptions 1987 1991 2010 edited by Asko Parpola and his colleagues The most recent volume republished photos taken in the 1920s and 1930s of hundreds of lost or stolen inscriptions along with many discovered in the last few decades formerly researchers had to supplement the materials in the Corpus by study of the tiny photos in the excavation reports of Marshall 1931 MacKay 1938 1943 Wheeler 1947 or reproductions in more recent scattered sources citation needed Religion Edit The Pashupati seal showing a seated figure surrounded by animals Swastika seals of Indus Valley Civilisation in British Museum Main article Religion of the Indus Valley Civilization Further information Prehistoric religion The religion and belief system of the Indus Valley people has received considerable attention especially from the view of identifying precursors to deities and religious practices of Indian religions that later developed in the area However due to the sparsity of evidence which is open to varying interpretations and the fact that the Indus script remains undeciphered the conclusions are partly speculative and largely based on a retrospective view from a much later Hindu perspective 186 Early and influential work in the area that set the trend for Hindu interpretations of archaeological evidence from the Harappan sites 187 was that of John Marshall who in 1931 identified the following as prominent features of the Indus religion a Great Male God and a Mother Goddess deification or veneration of animals and plants a symbolic representation of the phallus linga and vulva yoni and use of baths and water in religious practice Marshall s interpretations have been much debated and sometimes disputed over the following decades 188 189 One Indus Valley seal shows a seated figure with a horned headdress possibly tricephalic and possibly ithyphallic surrounded by animals Marshall identified the figure as an early form of the Hindu god Shiva or Rudra who is associated with asceticism yoga and linga regarded as a lord of animals and often depicted as having three eyes The seal has hence come to be known as the Pashupati Seal after Pashupati lord of all animals an epithet of Shiva 188 190 While Marshall s work has earned some support many critics and even supporters have raised several objections Doris Srinivasan has argued that the figure does not have three faces or yogic posture and that in Vedic literature Rudra was not a protector of wild animals 191 192 Herbert Sullivan and Alf Hiltebeitel also rejected Marshall s conclusions with the former claiming that the figure was female while the latter associated the figure with Mahisha the Buffalo God and the surrounding animals with vahanas vehicles of deities for the four cardinal directions 193 194 Writing in 2002 Gregory L Possehl concluded that while it would be appropriate to recognise the figure as a deity its association with the water buffalo and its posture as one of ritual discipline regarding it as a proto Shiva would be going too far 190 Despite the criticisms of Marshall s association of the seal with a proto Shiva icon it has been interpreted as the Tirthankara Rishabhanatha by some scholars of Jainism like Vilas Sangave 195 Historians such as Heinrich Zimmer and Thomas McEvilley believe that there is a connection between first Jain Tirthankara Rishabhanatha and the Indus Valley Civilisation 196 197 Marshall hypothesised the existence of a cult of Mother Goddess worship based upon excavation of several female figurines and thought that this was a precursor of the Hindu sect of Shaktism However the function of the female figurines in the life of Indus Valley people remains unclear and Possehl does not regard the evidence for Marshall s hypothesis to be terribly robust 198 Some of the baetyls interpreted by Marshall to be sacred phallic representations are now thought to have been used as pestles or game counters instead while the ring stones that were thought to symbolise yoni were determined to be architectural features used to stand pillars although the possibility of their religious symbolism cannot be eliminated 199 Many Indus Valley seals show animals with some depicting them being carried in processions while others show chimeric creations One seal from Mohenjo daro shows a half human a half buffalo monster attacking a tiger which may be a reference to the Sumerian myth of such a monster created by goddess Aruru to fight Gilgamesh 200 In contrast to contemporary Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilisations Indus Valley lacks any monumental palaces even though excavated cities indicate that the society possessed the requisite engineering knowledge 201 202 This may suggest that religious ceremonies if any may have been largely confined to individual homes small temples or the open air Several sites have been proposed by Marshall and later scholars as possibly devoted to religious purposes but at present only the Great Bath at Mohenjo daro is widely thought to have been so used as a place for ritual purification 198 203 The funerary practices of the Harappan civilisation are marked by fractional burial in which the body is reduced to skeletal remains by exposure to the elements before final interment and even cremation 204 205 Late Harappan Edit Late Harappan Period c 1900 1300 BCE Late Harappan figures from a hoard at Daimabad 2000 BCE Prince of Wales Museum Bombay 206 Around 1900 BCE signs of a gradual decline began to emerge and by around 1700 BCE most of the cities had been abandoned Recent examination of human skeletons from the site of Harappa has demonstrated that the end of the Indus civilisation saw an increase in inter personal violence and in infectious diseases like leprosy and tuberculosis 207 208 According to historian Upinder Singh the general picture presented by the late Harappan phase is one of a breakdown of urban networks and an expansion of rural ones 209 During the period of approximately 1900 to 1700 BCE multiple regional cultures emerged within the area of the Indus civilisation The Cemetery H culture was in Punjab Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh the Jhukar culture was in Sindh and the Rangpur culture characterised by Lustrous Red Ware pottery was in Gujarat 210 211 212 Other sites associated with the Late phase of the Harappan culture are Pirak in Balochistan Pakistan and Daimabad in Maharashtra India 106 The largest Late Harappan sites are Kudwala in Cholistan Bet Dwarka in Gujarat and Daimabad in Maharashtra which can be considered as urban but they are smaller and few in number compared with the Mature Harappan cities Bet Dwarka was fortified and continued to have contacts with the Persian Gulf region but there was a general decrease of long distance trade 213 On the other hand the period also saw a diversification of the agricultural base with a diversity of crops and the advent of double cropping as well as a shift of rural settlement towards the east and the south 214 The pottery of the Late Harappan period is described as showing some continuity with mature Harappan pottery traditions but also distinctive differences 215 Many sites continued to be occupied for some centuries although their urban features declined and disappeared Formerly typical artifacts such as stone weights and female figurines became rare There are some circular stamp seals with geometric designs but lacking the Indus script which characterised the mature phase of the civilisation Script is rare and confined to potsherd inscriptions 215 There was also a decline in long distance trade although the local cultures show new innovations in faience and glass making and carving of stone beads 106 Urban amenities such as drains and the public bath were no longer maintained and newer buildings were poorly constructed Stone sculptures were deliberately vandalised valuables were sometimes concealed in hoards suggesting unrest and the corpses of animals and even humans were left unburied in the streets and in abandoned buildings 216 During the later half of the 2nd millennium BCE most of the post urban Late Harappan settlements were abandoned altogether Subsequent material culture was typically characterised by temporary occupation the campsites of a population which was nomadic and mainly pastoralist and which used crude handmade pottery 217 However there is greater continuity and overlap between Late Harappan and subsequent cultural phases at sites in Punjab Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh primarily small rural settlements 214 218 Aryan migration Edit See also Vedic period and Indo Aryan migrations Painted pottery urns from Harappa Cemetery H culture c 1900 1300 BCE National Museum New Delhi In 1953 Sir Mortimer Wheeler proposed that the invasion of an Indo European tribe from Central Asia the Aryans caused the decline of the Indus civilisation As evidence he cited a group of 37 skeletons found in various parts of Mohenjo daro and passages in the Vedas referring to battles and forts However scholars soon started to reject Wheeler s theory since the skeletons belonged to a period after the city s abandonment and none were found near the citadel Subsequent examinations of the skeletons by Kenneth Kennedy in 1994 showed that the marks on the skulls were caused by erosion and not by violence 219 In the Cemetery H culture the late Harappan phase in the Punjab region some of the designs painted on the funerary urns have been interpreted through the lens of Vedic literature for instance peacocks with hollow bodies and a small human form inside which has been interpreted as the souls of the dead and a hound that can be seen as the hound of Yama the god of death 220 221 This may indicate the introduction of new religious beliefs during this period but the archaeological evidence does not support the hypothesis that the Cemetery H people were the destroyers of the Harappan cities 222 Climate change and drought Edit See also Bond event and 4 2 kiloyear event Suggested contributory causes for the localisation of the IVC include changes in the course of the river 223 and climate change that is also signaled for the neighboring areas of the Middle East 224 225 As of 2016 update many scholars believe that drought and a decline in trade with Egypt and Mesopotamia caused the collapse of the Indus civilisation 226 The climate change which caused the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisation was possibly due to an abrupt and critical mega drought and cooling 4 200 years ago which marks the onset of the Meghalayan Age the present stage of the Holocene 227 The Ghaggar Hakra system was rain fed 228 ak 229 al and water supply depended on the monsoons The Indus Valley climate grew significantly cooler and drier from about 1800 BCE linked to a general weakening of the monsoon at that time 4 The Indian monsoon declined and aridity increased with the Ghaggar Hakra retracting its reach towards the foothills of the Himalaya 4 230 231 leading to erratic and less extensive floods that made inundation agriculture less sustainable Aridification reduced the water supply enough to cause the civilisation s demise and scatter its population eastward 232 233 108 e According to Giosan et al 2012 the IVC residents did not develop irrigation capabilities relying mainly on the seasonal monsoons leading to summer floods As the monsoons kept shifting south the floods grew too erratic for sustainable agricultural activities The residents then migrated towards the Ganges basin in the east where they established smaller villages and isolated farms The small surplus produced in these small communities did not allow the development of trade and the cities died out 234 235 Continuity and coexistence Edit Archaeological excavations indicate that the decline of Harappa drove people eastward 236 According to Possehl after 1900 BCE the number of sites in today s India increased from 218 to 853 According to Andrew Lawler excavations along the Gangetic plain show that cities began to arise there starting about 1200 BCE just a few centuries after Harappa was deserted and much earlier than once suspected 226 am According to Jim Shaffer there was a continuous series of cultural developments just as in most areas of the world These link the so called two major phases of urbanisation in South Asia 238 At sites such as Bhagwanpura in Haryana archaeological excavations have discovered an overlap between the final phase of Late Harappan pottery and the earliest phase of Painted Grey Ware pottery the latter being associated with the Vedic culture and dating from around 1200 BCE This site provides evidence of multiple social groups occupying the same village but using different pottery and living in different types of houses over time the Late Harappan pottery was gradually replaced by Painted Grey ware pottery and other cultural changes indicated by archaeology include the introduction of the horse iron tools and new religious practices 106 There is also a Harappan site called Rojdi in Rajkot district of Saurashtra Its excavation started under an archaeological team from Gujarat State Department of Archaeology and the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania in 1982 83 In their report on archaeological excavations at Rojdi Gregory Possehl and M H Raval write that although there are obvious signs of cultural continuity between the Harappan civilisation and later South Asian cultures many aspects of the Harappan sociocultural system and integrated civilization were lost forever while the Second Urbanisation of India beginning with the Northern Black Polished Ware culture c 600 BCE lies well outside this sociocultural environment 239 Post Harappan EditMain article Iron Age in India Previously scholars believed that the decline of the Harappan civilisation led to an interruption of urban life in the Indian subcontinent However the Indus Valley Civilisation did not disappear suddenly and many elements of the Indus civilisation appear in later cultures The Cemetery H culture may be the manifestation of the Late Harappan over a large area in the region of Punjab Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh and the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture its successor David Gordon White cites three other mainstream scholars who have emphatically demonstrated that Vedic religion derives partially from the Indus Valley Civilisations 240 As of 2016 update archaeological data suggests that the material culture classified as Late Harappan may have persisted until at least c 1000 900 BCE and was partially contemporaneous with the Painted Grey Ware culture 238 Harvard archaeologist Richard Meadow points to the late Harappan settlement of Pirak which thrived continuously from 1800 BCE to the time of the invasion of Alexander the Great in 325 BCE 226 In the aftermath of the Indus civilisation s localisation regional cultures emerged to varying degrees showing the influence of the Indus civilisation In the formerly great city of Harappa burials have been found that correspond to a regional culture called the Cemetery H culture At the same time the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture expanded from Rajasthan into the Gangetic Plain The Cemetery H culture has the earliest evidence for cremation a practice dominant in Hinduism today The inhabitants of the Indus Valley Civilisation migrated from the river valleys of Indus and Ghaggar Hakra towards the Himalayan foothills of the Ganga Yamuna basin 241 See also EditCradle of civilization History of Hinduism History of Afghanistan History of India History of Pakistan List of Indus Valley Civilisation sites List of inventions and discoveries of the Indus Valley Civilisation Religion of the Indus Valley Civilization Early Indians 2018 non fiction book by Tony JosephNotes Edit Wright Mesopotamia and Egypt co existed with the Indus civilization during its florescence between 2600 and 1900 BC 2 Wright The Indus civilisation is one of three in the Ancient East that along with Mesopotamia and Pharaonic Egypt was a cradle of early civilisation in the Old World Childe 1950 Mesopotamia and Egypt were longer lived but coexisted with Indus civilisation during its florescence between 2600 and 1900 B C Of the three the Indus was the most expansive extending from today s northeast Afghanistan to Pakistan and India 3 Habib Harappa in Sahiwal district of west Punjab Pakistan had long been known to archaeologists as an extensive site on the Ravi river but its true significance as a major city of an early great civilization remained unrecognized until the discovery of Mohenjo daro near the banks of the Indus in the Larkana district of Sindh by Rakhaldas Banerji in 1922 Sir John Marshall then Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India used the term Indus civilization for the culture discovered at Harappa and Mohenjo daro a term doubly apt because of the geographical context implied in the name Indus and the presence of cities implied in the word civilization Others notably the Archaeological Survey of India after Independence have preferred to call it Harappan or Mature Harappan taking Harappa to be its type site 5 These covered carnelian products seal carving work in copper bronze lead and tin 9 a b c Brooke 2014 p 296 The story in Harappan India was somewhat different see Figure 111 3 The Bronze Age village and urban societies of the Indus Valley are something of an anomaly in that archaeologists have found little indication of local defense and regional warfare It would seem that the bountiful monsoon rainfall of the Early to Mid Holocene had forged a condition of plenty for all and that competitive energies were channeled into commerce rather than conflict Scholars have long argued that these rains shaped the origins of the urban Harappan societies which emerged from Neolithic villages around 2600 BC It now appears that this rainfall began to slowly taper off in the third millennium at just the point that the Harappan cities began to develop Thus it seems that this first urbanisation in South Asia was the initial response of the Indus Valley peoples to the beginning of Late Holocene aridification These cities were maintained for 300 to 400 years and then gradually abandoned as the Harappan peoples resettled in scattered villages in the eastern range of their territories into Punjab and the Ganges Valley 17 footnote a Giosan et al 2012 b Ponton et al 2012 c Rashid et al 2011 d Madella amp Fuller 2006 Compare with the very different interpretations in e Possehl 2002 pp 237 245 f Staubwasser et al 2003 Possehl There are 1 056 Mature Harappan sites that have been reported of which 96 have been excavated 13 Coningham and Young More than 1 000 settlements belonging to the Integrated Era have been identified Singh 2008 137 but there are only five significant urban sites at the peak of the settlement hierarchy Smith 2 006a 110 Figure 6 2 These are Mohenjo daro in the lower Indus plain Harappa in the western Punjab Ganweriwala in Cholistan Dholavira in western Gujarat and Rakhigarhi in Haryana Mohenjo daro covered an area of more than 250 hectares Harappa exceeded 150 hectares Dholavira 100 hectares and Ganweriwala and Rakhigarhi around 80 hectares each 16 Wright Five major Indus cities are discussed in this chapter During the Urban period the early town of Harappa expanded in size and population and became a major centre in the Upper Indus Other cities emerging during the Urban period include Mohenjo daro in the Lower Indus Dholavira to the south on the western edge of peninsular India in Kutch Ganweriwala in Cholistan and a fifth city Rakhigarhi on the Ghaggar Hakra Rakhigarhi will be discussed briefly in view of the limited published material 17 Wright Unable to state the age of the civilization he went on to observe that the Indus which he John Marshall named after the river system artifacts differed from any known other civilizations in the region 21 Habib Sir John Marshall then Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India used the term Indus civilization for the culture discovered at Harappa and Mohenjo daro a term doubly apt because of the geographical context implied in the name Indus and the presence of cities implied in the word civilization Others notably the Archaeological Survey of India after Independence have preferred to call it Harappan or Mature Harappan taking Harappa to be its type site 22 Giosan 2012 Numerous speculations have advanced the idea that the Ghaggar Hakra fluvial system at times identified with the lost mythical river of Sarasvati e g 4 5 7 19 was a large glacier fed Himalayan river Potential sources for this river include the Yamuna River the Sutlej River or both rivers However the lack of large scale incision on the interfluve demonstrates that large glacier fed rivers did not flow across the Ghaggar Hakra region during the Holocene The present Ghaggar Hakra valley and its tributary rivers are currently dry or have seasonal flows Yet rivers were undoubtedly active in this region during the Urban Harappan Phase We recovered sandy fluvial deposits approximately 5 400 y old at Fort Abbas in Pakistan SI Text and recent work 33 on the upper Ghaggar Hakra interfluve in India also documented Holocene channel sands that are approximately 4 300 y old On the upper interfluve fine grained floodplain deposition continued until the end of the Late Harappan Phase as recent as 2 900 y ago 33 Fig 2B This widespread fluvial redistribution of sediment suggests that reliable monsoon rains were able to sustain perennial rivers earlier during the Holocene and explains why Harappan settlements flourished along the entire Ghaggar Hakra system without access to a glacier fed river 4 Fisher This was the same broad period that saw the rise of the civilisations of Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers Egypt along the Nile and northeast China in the Yellow River basin At its peak the Indus was the most extensive of these ancient civilisations extending 1 500 km 900 mi up the Indus plain with a core area of 30 000 to 100 000 km2 12 000 to 39 000 sq mi and with more ecologically diverse peripheral spheres of economic and cultural influence extending out to ten times that area The cultural and technological uniformity of the Indus cities is especially striking in light of the relatively great distances among them with separations of about 280 km 170 mi whereas the Mesopotamian cities for example only averaged about 20 to 25 km 12 to 16 mi apart 26 Dyson The subcontinent s people were hunter gatherers for many millennia There were very few of them Indeed 10 000 years ago there may only have been a couple of hundred thousand people living in small often isolated groups the descendants of various modern human incomers Then perhaps linked to events in Mesopotamia about 8 500 years ago agriculture emerged in Baluchistan 27 Fisher The earliest discovered instance in India of well established settled agricultural society is at Mehrgarh in the hills between the Bolan Pass and the Indus plain today in Pakistan see Map 3 1 From as early as 7000 BCE communities there started investing increased labor in preparing the land and selecting planting tending and harvesting particular grain producing plants They also domesticated animals including sheep goats pigs and oxen both humped zebu Bos indicus and unhumped Bos taurus Castrating oxen for instance turned them from mainly meat sources into domesticated draft animals as well 28 Coningham and Young Mehrgarh remains one of the key sites in South Asia because it has provided the earliest known undisputed evidence for farming and pastoral communities in the region and its plant and animal material provide clear evidence for the ongoing manipulation and domestication of certain species Perhaps most importantly in a South Asian context the role played by zebu makes this a distinctive localised development with a character completely different to other parts of the world Finally the longevity of the site and its articulation with the neighbouring site of Nausharo c 2800 2000 BCE provides a very clear continuity from South Asia s first farming villages to the emergence of its first cities Jarrige 1984 29 Dyson In the millennia which followed farming developed and spread slowly into the Indus valley and adjacent areas The transition to agriculture led to population growth and the eventual rise of the Indus civilisation With the movement to settled agriculture and the emergence of villages towns and cities there was probably a modest rise in the average death rate and a slightly greater rise in the birth rate 27 Dyson Mohenjo daro and Harappa may each have contained between 30 000 and 60 000 people perhaps more in the former case Water transport was crucial for the provisioning of these and other cities That said the vast majority of people lived in rural areas At the height of the Indus valley civilisation the subcontinent may have contained 4 6 million people 27 Fisher Such an agricultural revolution enabled food surpluses that supported growing populations Their largely cereal diet did not necessarily make people healthier however since conditions like caries and protein deficiencies can increase Further infectious diseases spread faster with denser living conditions of both humans and domesticated animals which can spread measles influenza and other diseases to humans 28 McIntosh Population Growth and Distribution The prehistory of the Indo Iranian borderlands shows a steady increase over time in the number and density of settlements based on farming and pastoralism By contrast the population of the Indus plains and adjacent regions lived mainly by hunting and gathering the limited traces suggest their settlements were far fewer in number and were small and widely scattered though to some extent this apparent situation must reflect the difficulty of locating hunter gatherer settlements The presence of domestic animals in some hunter gatherer settlements attests to contact with the people of the border lands probably in the context of pastoralists seasonal movement from the hills into the plains The potential for population expansion in the hills was severely limited and so from the fourth millennium into the third settlers moved out from the borderlands into the plains and beyond into Gujarat the first being pastoralists followed later by farmers The enormous potential of the greater Indus region offered scope for huge population increase by the end of the Mature Harappan period the Harappans are estimated to have numbered somewhere between 1 and 5 million probably well below the region s carrying capacity 30 Masson A long march preceded our arrival at Haripah through jangal of the closest description When I joined the camp I found it in front of the village and ruinous brick castle Behind us was a large circular mound or eminence and to the west was an irregular rocky height crowned with the remains of buildings in fragments of walls with niches after the eastern manner Tradition affirms the existence here of a city so considerable that it extended to Chicha Watni thirteen cosses distant and that it was destroyed by a particular visitation of Providence brought down by the lust and crimes of the sovereign 42 Guha The intense explorations to locate sites related to the Indus civilisation along the Ghaggar Hakra mostly by the Archaeological Survey of India immediately after Indian independence from the 1950s through the 70s although ostensibly following Sir Aurel Stein s explorations in 1942 were to a large extent initiated by a patriotic zeal to compensate for the loss of this more ancient civilisation by the newly freed nation as apart from Rangpur Gujarat and Kotla Nihang Khan Punjab the sites remained in Pakistan 54 Number of Indus script inscribed objects and seals obtained from various Harappan sites 1540 from Mohanjodaro 985 from Harappa 66 from Chanhudaro 165 from Lothal 99 from Kalibangan 7 from Banawali 6 from Ur in Iraq 5 from Surkotada 4 from Chandigarh According to Ahmad Hasan Dani professor emeritus at Quaid e Azam University Islamabad the discovery of Mehrgarh changed the entire concept of the Indus civilisation There we have the whole sequence right from the beginning of settled village life 64 a b According to Gangal et al 2014 there is strong archeological and geographical evidence that neolithic farming spread from the Near East into north west India 79 80 Gangal et al 2014 79 There are several lines of evidence that support the idea of a connection between the Neolithic in the Near East and in the Indian subcontinent The prehistoric site of Mehrgarh in Baluchistan modern Pakistan is the earliest Neolithic site in the north west Indian subcontinent dated as early as 8500 BCE 82 Neolithic domesticated crops in Mehrgarh include more than 90 barley and a small amount of wheat There is good evidence for the local domestication of barley and the zebu cattle at Mehrgarh 81 83 but the wheat varieties are suggested to be of Near Eastern origin as the modern distribution of wild varieties of wheat is limited to Northern Levant and Southern Turkey 84 A detailed satellite map study of a few archaeological sites in the Baluchistan and Khybar Pakhtunkhwa regions also suggests similarities in early phases of farming with sites in Western Asia 85 Pottery prepared by sequential slab construction circular fire pits filled with burnt pebbles and large granaries are common to both Mehrgarh and many Mesopotamian sites 86 The postures of the skeletal remains in graves at Mehrgarh bear strong resemblance to those at Ali Kosh in the Zagros Mountains of southern Iran 81 Clay figurines found in Mehrgarh resemble those discovered at Teppe Zagheh on the Qazvin plain south of the Elburz range in Iran the 7th millennium BCE and Jeitun in Turkmenistan the 6th millennium BCE 87 Strong arguments have been made for the Near Eastern origin of some domesticated plants and herd animals at Jeitun in Turkmenistan pp 225 227 88 The Near East is separated from the Indus Valley by the arid plateaus ridges and deserts of Iran and Afghanistan where rainfall agriculture is possible only in the foothills and cul de sac valleys 89 Nevertheless this area was not an insurmountable obstacle for the dispersal of the Neolithic The route south of the Caspian sea is a part of the Silk Road some sections of which were in use from at least 3 000 BCE connecting Badakhshan north eastern Afghanistan and south eastern Tajikistan with Western Asia Egypt and India 90 Similarly the section from Badakhshan to the Mesopotamian plains the Great Khorasan Road was apparently functioning by 4 000 BCE and numerous prehistoric sites are located along it whose assemblages are dominated by the Cheshmeh Ali Tehran Plain ceramic technology forms and designs 89 Striking similarities in figurines and pottery styles and mud brick shapes between widely separated early Neolithic sites in the Zagros Mountains of north western Iran Jarmo and Sarab the Deh Luran Plain in southwestern Iran Tappeh Ali Kosh and Chogha Sefid Susiana Chogha Bonut and Chogha Mish the Iranian Central Plateau Tappeh Sang e Chakhmaq and Turkmenistan Jeitun suggest a common incipient culture 91 The Neolithic dispersal across South Asia plausibly involved migration of the population 92 88 This possibility is also supported by Y chromosome and mtDNA analyses 93 94 They further noted that the direct lineal descendents of the Neolithic inhabitants of Mehrgarh are to be found to the south and the east of Mehrgarh in northwestern India and the western edge of the Deccan plateau with neolithic Mehrgarh showing greater affinity with chalocolithic Inamgaon south of Mehrgarh than with chalcolithic Mehrgarh 95 Gallego romero et al 2011 refer to Meadow 1993 97 Meadow RH 1993 Animal domestication in the Middle East a revised view from the eastern margin In Possehl G editor Harappan civilization New Delhi Oxford University Press and India Book House pp 295 320 98 It has been noted that the courtyard pattern and techniques of flooring of Harappan houses has similarities to the way house building is still done in some villages of the region 114 a b Gangal refers to Jarrige 2008a and Costantini 2008 Gangal refers to Fuller 2006 A large proportion of data however remains ambiguous Reliable local isotopic references for fats and oils are unavailable and lipid levels in IVC vessels are quite low See David McAlpin Toward Proto Elamo Dravidian Language vol 50 no 1 1974 David McAlpin Elamite and Dravidian Further Evidence of Relationships Current Anthropology vol 16 no 1 1975 David McAlpin Linguistic prehistory the Dravidian situation in Madhav M Deshpande and Peter Edwin Hook Aryan and Non Aryan in India Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan Ann Arbor 1979 David McAlpin Proto Elamo Dravidian The Evidence and its Implications Transactions of the American Philosophical Society vol 71 pt 3 1981 See also Mukherjee et al 2001 More recently about 15 000 10 000 years before present ybp when agriculture developed in the Fertile Crescent region that extends from Israel through northern Syria to western Iran there was another eastward wave of human migration Cavalli Sforza et al 1994 Renfrew 1987 a part of which also appears to have entered India This wave has been postulated to have brought the Dravidian languages into India Renfrew 1987 Subsequently the Indo European Aryan language family was introduced into India about 4 000 ybp Derenko 2013 The spread of these new technologies has been associated with the dispersal of Dravidian and Indo European languages in southern Asia It is hypothesized that the proto Elamo Dravidian language most likely originated in the Elam province in southwestern Iran spread eastwards with the movement of farmers to the Indus Valley and the Indian sub continent Derenko refers to Renfrew 1987 Archaeology and Language The Puzzle of Indo European Origins Renfrew 1996 Language families and the spread of farming In Harris DR editor The origins and spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia pp 70 92 Cavalli Sforza Menozzi amp Piazza 1994 Kumar The analysis of two Y chromosome variants Hgr9 and Hgr3 provides interesting data Quintan Murci et al 2001 Microsatellite variation of Hgr9 among Iranians Pakistanis and Indians indicate an expansion of populations to around 9000 YBP in Iran and then to 6 000 YBP in India This migration originated in what was historically termed Elam in south west Iran to the Indus valley and may have been associated with the spread of Dravidian languages from south west Iran Quintan Murci et al 2001 174 Nevertheless Kivisild et al 1999 note that a small fraction of the West Eurasian mtDNA lineages found in Indian populations can be ascribed to a relatively recent admixture 172 at c 9 300 3 000 years before present 173 which coincides with the arrival to India of cereals domesticated in the Fertile Crescent and lends credence to the suggested linguistic connection between the Elamite and Dravidic populations 173 According to Kumar 2004 referring to Quintan Murci et al 2001 microsatellite variation of Hgr9 among Iranians Pakistanis and Indians indicate an expansion of populations to around 9000 YBP in Iran and then to 6 000 YBP in India This migration originated in what was historically termed Elam in south west Iran to the Indus valley and may have been associated with the spread of Dravidian languages from south west Iran 174 ai According to Palanichamy et al 2015 The presence of mtDNA haplogroups HV14 and U1a and Y chromosome haplogroup L1 in Dravidian populations indicates the spread of the Dravidian language into India from west Asia 175 Geological research by a group led by Peter Clift investigated how the courses of rivers have changed in this region since 8000 years ago to test whether climate or river reorganisations caused the decline of the Harappan Using U Pb dating of zircon sand grains they found that sediments typical of the Beas Sutlej and Yamuna rivers Himalayan tributaries of the Indus are actually present in former Ghaggar Hakra channels However sediment contributions from these glacial fed rivers stopped at least by 10 000 years ago well before the development of the Indus civilisation 228 Tripathi et al 2004 found that the isotopes of sediments carried by the Ghaggar Hakra system over the last 20 thousand years do not come from the glaciated Higher Himalaya but have a sub Himalayan source and concluded that the river system was rain fed They also concluded that this contradicted the idea of a Harappan time mighty Sarasvati river 229 Most sites of the Painted Grey Ware culture in the Ghaggar Hakra and Upper Ganges Plain were small farming villages However several dozen PGW sites eventually emerged as relatively large settlements that can be characterized as towns the largest of which were fortified by ditches or moats and embankments made of piled earth with wooden palisades albeit smaller and simpler than the elaborately fortified large cities which grew after 600 BCE in the more fully urban Northern Black Polished Ware culture 237 References Edit Dyson 2018 p vi a b c Wright 2009 p 1 a b Wright 2009 a b c d e f Giosan et al 2012 a b Habib 2015 p 13 Wright 2009 p 2 a b Shaffer 1992 I 441 464 II 425 446 a b c Kenoyer 1991 Wright 2009 pp 115 125 Dyson 2018 p 29 Mohenjo daro and Harappa may each have contained between 30 000 and 60 000 people perhaps more in the former case Water transport was crucial for the provisioning of these and other cities That said the vast majority of people lived in rural areas At the height of the Indus valley civilization the subcontinent may have contained 4 6 million people McIntosh 2008 p 387 The enormous potential of the greater Indus region offered scope for huge population increase by the end of the Mature Harappan period the Harappans are estimated to have numbered somewhere between 1 and 5 million probably well below the region s carrying capacity Possehl 2002a a b c Possehl 2002a There are 1 056 Mature Harappan sites that have been reported of which 96 have been excavated a b Possehl 2002 p 20 a b Singh Upinder 2008 p 137 Today the count of Harappan sites has risen to about 1 022 of which 406 are in Pakistan and 616 in India Of these only 97 have so far been excavated a b Coningham amp Young 2015 p 192 a b Wright 2009 p 107 We are all Harappans Outlook India 4 February 2022 Ratnagar 2006a p 25 Lockard Craig 2010 Societies Networks and Transitions Vol 1 To 1500 2nd ed India Cengage Learning p 40 ISBN 978 1 4390 8535 6 a b c Wright 2009 p 10 a b Habib 2002 pp 13 14 Possehl 2002 pp 8 11 a b c d e f Singh Upinder 2008 p 137 Habib 2002 p 44 a b Fisher 2018 p 35 a b c d e f Dyson 2018 p 29 a b c d Fisher 2018 p 33 a b Coningham amp Young 2015 p 138 a b McIntosh 2008 pp 186 187 Dales George F 1962 Harappan Outposts on the Makran Coast Antiquity 36 142 86 92 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00029689 S2CID 164175444 Rao Shikaripura Ranganatha 1973 Lothal and the Indus civilization London Asia Publishing House ISBN 978 0 210 22278 2 Kenoyer 1998 p 96 Dani Ahmad Hassan 1970 1971 Excavations in the Gomal Valley Ancient Pakistan 5 1 177 Joshi J P Bala M 1982 Manda A Harappan site in Jammu and Kashmir In Possehl Gregory L ed Harappan Civilization A recent perspective New Delhi Oxford University Press pp 185 195 A Ghosh ed Excavations at Alamgirpur Indian Archaeology A Review 1958 1959 Delhi Archaeol Surv India pp 51 52 Ray Himanshu Prabha 2003 The Archaeology of Seafaring in Ancient South Asia Cambridge University Press p 95 ISBN 978 0 521 01109 9 Dales George F 1979 The Balakot Project Summary of four years excavations in Pakistan In Maurizio Taddei ed South Asian Archaeology 1977 Naples Seminario di Studi Asiatici Series Minor 6 Instituto Universitario Orientate pp 241 274 Bisht R S 1989 A new model of the Harappan town planning as revealed at Dholavira in Kutch A surface study of its plan and architecture In Chatterjee Bhaskar ed History and Archaeology New Delhi Ramanand Vidya Bhawan pp 379 408 ISBN 978 81 85205 46 5 Marshall 1931 p x a b c d e f g Wright 2009 pp 5 6 Masson 1842 pp 452 453 a b Wright 2009 p 6 a b Wright 2009 pp 6 7 a b Coningham amp Young 2015 p 180 a b Wright 2009 p 7 Cunningham 1875 pp 105 108 and pl 32 33 a b c d Wright 2009 p 8 a b Wright 2009 pp 8 9 a b Wright 2009 p 9 Wright 2009 pp 9 10 Possehl 2002 pp 3 and 12 Lawrence Joffe 30 March 2009 Ahmad Hasan Dani Pakistan s foremost archaeologist and author of 30 books The Guardian newspaper Retrieved 29 April 2020 a b Guha Sudeshna 2005 Negotiating Evidence History Archaeology and the Indus Civilisation PDF Modern Asian Studies Cambridge University Press 39 2 399 426 419 doi 10 1017 S0026749X04001611 S2CID 145463239 Archived PDF from the original on 24 May 2006 Gilbert Marc Jason 2017 South Asia in World History Oxford University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 19 976034 3 Immediately after the discovery of Harappan cities on the Indian side of the border some nationalist minded Indians began to speculate that the Ghaggar Hakra riverbed may have more sites than neighboring Pakistan s Indus Valley Such claims may prove to be valid but modern nationalist arguments complicate the task of South Asian archaeologists who must deal with the poor condition of Harappan sites The high water table means the oldest sites are under water or waterlogged and difficult to access Ratnagar 2006b pp 7 8 If in an ancient mound we find only one pot and two bead necklaces similar to those of Harappa and Mohenjo daro with the bulk of pottery tools and ornaments of a different type altogether we cannot call that site Harappan It is instead a site with Harappan contacts Where the Sarasvati valley sites are concerned we find that many of them are sites of local culture with distinctive pottery clay bangles terracotta beads and grinding stones some of them showing Harappan contact and comparatively few are full fledged Mature Harappan sites Iravatham Mahadevan 1977 The Indus Script Text Concordance and Tables pp 6 7 Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century p 169 a b Coningham amp Young 2015 p 192 More than 1 000 settlements belonging to the Integrated Era have been identified Singh 2008 137 but there are only five significant urban sites at the peak of the settlement hierarchy Smith 2 006a 110 Figure 6 2 These are Mohenjo daro in the lower Indus plain Harappa in the western Punjab Ganweriwala in Cholistan Dholavira in western Gujarat and Rakhigarhi in Haryana Mohenjo daro covered an area of more than 250 hectares Harappa exceeded 150 hectares Dholavira 100 hectares and Ganweriwala and Rakhigarhi around 80 hectares each Michon 2015 pp 44ff Quote After Partition the archaeological work on the early historic period in India and Pakistan developed differently In India while the colonial administrative structure remained intact the ASI made a concerted effort to Indianise the field The early historic period was understood as an important chapter in the long unified history of the Indian subcontinent and this understanding supported Indian goals of national unity In Pakistan however the project of nation building was focused more on promoting the rich Islamic archaeological heritage within its borders and most early historic sites therefore were left to the spades of foreign missions Coningham amp Young 2015 p 85 Quote At the same time he continued to spend part of the years 1949 and 1950 in Pakistan as an adviser to the Government overseeing the establishment of the government s Department of Archaeology in Pakistan and the National Museum of Pakistan in Karachi He returned to Pakistan in 1958 to carry out excavations at Charsadda and then joined the UNESCO team concerned with the preservation and conservation of Mohenjo daro during the 1960s Mohenjo daro was eventually inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1980 Wright 2009 p 14 Coningham amp Young 2015 p 109 Quote This model of population movement and agricultural diffusion built on the evidence from Kili Gul Muhammad was completely revised with the discovery of Mehrgarh at the entrance of the Bolan Pass in Baluchistan in the early 1970s by Jean Francois Jarrige and his team Jarrige 1979 Noting an archaeological section exposed by flash flooding they found a site covering two square kilometres which was occupied between circa 6500 and 2500 BCE a b c Chandler Graham September October 1999 Traders of the Plain Saudi Aramco World 34 42 Archived from the original on 18 February 2007 Retrieved 11 February 2007 a b Coningham amp Young 2015 p 27 Coningham amp Young 2015 p 25 Manuel 2010 p 148 a b c d e Kenoyer 1997 p 53 Manuel 2010 p 149 Coningham amp Young 2015 p 145 Kenoyer 1991 p 335 Parpola 2015 p 17 a b Kenoyer 1991 p 333 Kenoyer 1991 p 336 a b Coningham amp Young 2015 p 28 Stone age man used dentist drill 6 April 2006 via news bbc co uk Archaeological Site of Mehrgarh UNESCO World Heritage Centre 30 January 2004 Hirst K Kris 2005 Updated May 30 2019 Mehrgarh Pakistan and Life in the Indus Valley Before Harappa ThoughtCo a b c d e f Gangal Sarson amp Shukurov 2014 a b Singh Sakshi 2016 a b c d e Jarrige 2008a Possehl GL 1999 Indus Age The Beginnings Philadelphia Univ Pennsylvania Press Costantini 2008 Fuller 2006 Petrie C A Thomas K D 2012 The topographic and environmental context of the earliest village sites in western South Asia Antiquity 86 334 1055 1067 doi 10 1017 s0003598x00048249 S2CID 131732322 Goring Morris A N Belfer Cohen A 2011 Neolithization processes in the Levant The outer envelope Curr Anthropol 52 S195 S208 doi 10 1086 658860 S2CID 142928528 Jarrige 2008b a b Harris D R 2010 Origins of Agriculture in Western Central Asia An Environmental Archaeological Study Philadelphia Univ Pennsylvania Press a b Hiebert FT Dyson RH 2002 Prehistoric Nishapur and frontier between Central Asia and Iran Iranica Antiqua XXXVII 113 149 doi 10 2143 ia 37 0 120 Kuzmina EE Mair V H 2008 The Prehistory of the Silk Road Philadelphia Univ Pennsylvania Press Alizadeh A 2003 Excavations at the prehistoric mound of Chogha Bonut Khuzestan Iran Technical report University of Chicago Illinois Dolukhanov P 1994 Environment and Ethnicity in the Ancient Middle East Aldershot Ashgate Quintana Murci L Krausz C Zerjal T Sayar SH et al 2001 Y chromosome lineages trace diffusion of people and languages in Southwestern Asia Am J Hum Genet 68 2 537 542 doi 10 1086 318200 PMC 1235289 PMID 11133362 Quintana Murci L Chaix R Wells RS Behar DM et al 2004 Where West meets East The complex mtDNA landscape of the Southwest and Central Asian corridor Am J Hum Genet 74 5 827 845 doi 10 1086 383236 PMC 1181978 PMID 15077202 a b c Coningham amp Young 2015 p 114 Mascarenhas et al 2015 p 9 a b c Gallego Romero 2011 p 9 Gallego Romero 2011 p 12 Possehl G L 2000 The Early Harappan Phase Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 60 61 227 241 ISSN 0045 9801 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December 2003 Retrieved 18 November 2009 a b Brooke 2014 p 296 Shaffer Jim G Lichtenstein Diane A 1989 Ethnicity and Change in the Indus Valley Cultural Tradition Old Problems and New Perspectives in the Archaeology of South Asia Wisconsin Archaeological Reports Vol 2 pp 117 126 a b Bisht R S 1982 Excavations at Banawali 1974 77 In Possehl Gregory L ed Harappan Civilization A Contemporary Perspective New Delhi Oxford and IBH Publishing Co pp 113 124 Charles Keith Maisels Early Civilizations of the Old World The Formative Histories of Egypt The Levant Mesopotamia India and China Routledge 2003 ISBN 1134837305 Indus re enters India after two centuries feeds Little Rann Nal Sarovar India Today 7 November 2011 Retrieved 7 November 2011 Possehl 2002 pp 193ff Lal 2002 pp 93 95 Morris 1994 p 31 Kenoyer Jonathan Mark 2008 Indus Civilization PDF Encyclopedia of Archaeology Vol 1 p 719 Archived PDF from the original on 12 April 2020 Green Adam S 16 September 2020 Killing the Priest King Addressing Egalitarianism in the Indus Civilization Journal of Archaeological Research 29 2 153 202 doi 10 1007 s10814 020 09147 9 ISSN 1573 7756 Angelakis Andreas N Rose Joan B 14 September 2014 Evolution of Sanitation and Wastewater Technologies through the Centuries IWA Publishing pp 26 40 ISBN 978 1 78040 484 4 Retrieved 27 February 2022 a b Kenoyer 1997 Green Adam S 1 June 2021 Killing the Priest King Addressing Egalitarianism in the Indus Civilization Journal of Archaeological Research 29 2 153 202 doi 10 1007 s10814 020 09147 9 ISSN 1573 7756 S2CID 224872813 Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus Metropolitan Museum of Art 2003 pp 401 402 ISBN 9781588390431 Sergent Bernard 1997 Genese de l Inde in French Paris Payot p 113 ISBN 978 2 228 89116 5 McIntosh 2008 p 248 Lal 2002 p 89 Keay John India a History New York Grove Press 2000 a b Lal 2002 p 82 Singh 2015 111 112 112 quoted Flora 2000 p 319 Flora 2000 pp 319 320 DeVale Sue Carole Lawergren Bo 2001 Harp IV Asia Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 45738 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required a b Marshall 1931 p 45 Possehl 2002 pp 111 112 Possehl 2002 p 111 Possehl 2002 p 127 Mackay Ernest John Henry 1928 1929 Excavations at Mohenjodaro Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India 74 75 Littleton C Scott 2005 Gods Goddesses and Mythology Marshall Cavendish p 732 ISBN 9780761475651 Marshall 1996 p 389 a b Singh Vipul 2008 The Pearson Indian History Manual for the UPSC Civil Services Preliminary Examination Pearson Education India p 35 ISBN 9788131717530 The Indus Script Text Concordance And Tables Iravathan Mahadevan p 76 During Caspers GS Elisabeth Reade Julian E 2008 The Indus Mesopotamia relationship reconsidered Archaeopress pp 12 14 ISBN 978 1 4073 0312 3 Kenoyer Jonathan M Heuston Kimberley Burton 2005 The Ancient South Asian World Oxford University Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 19 522243 2 The molded terra cotta tablet shows a flat bottomed Indus boat with a central cabin Branches tied to the roof may have been used for protection from bad luck and travelers took a pet bird along to help them guide them to land Mathew 2017 p 32 McIntosh 2008 pp 158 159 Allchin amp Allchin 1982 pp 188 189 listing of figures p x Robinson Andrew 2015 The Indus Lost Civilizations London Reakton Books pp 89 91 ISBN 9781780235417 To what extent such a reed made river vessel would have been seaworthy is debatable Did the flat bottomed Indus river boats mutate into the crescent shaped hull of Heyerdahl s reed boat before taking to the Arabian Sea Did they reach as far as the coast of East Africa as the Tigris did No one knows Singh Upinder 2008 p 157 Parpola 2005 pp 2 3 Watson Traci 29 April 2013 Surprising Discoveries From the Indus Civilization National Geographic Narasimhan Vagheesh M Patterson Nick Moorjani Priya Rohland Nadin Bernardos Rebecca Mallick Swapan Lazaridis Iosif Nakatsuka Nathan Olalde Inigo Lipson Mark Kim Alexander M 6 September 2019 The Formation of Human Populations in South and Central Asia Science 365 6457 eaat7487 doi 10 1126 science aat7487 ISSN 0036 8075 PMC 6822619 PMID 31488661 Neyland R S 1992 The seagoing vessels on Dilmun seals In Keith D H Carrell T L eds Underwater archaeology proceedings of the Society for Historical Archaeology Conference at Kingston Jamaica 1992 Tucson AZ Society for Historical Archaeology pp 68 74 a b Maurizio Tosi Black Boats of Magan Some Thoughts on Bronze Age Water Transport in Oman and beyond from the Impressed Bitumen Slabs of Ra s al Junayz in A Parpola ed South Asian Archaeology 1993 Helsinki 1995 pp 745 761 in collaboration with Serge Cleuziou Daniel T Potts 2009 Maritime Trade Pre Islamic Period iranicaonline org Maurizio Tosi Die Indus Zivilisation jenseits des indischen Subkontinents in Vergessene Stadte am Indus Mainz am Rhein 1987 ISBN 3 8053 0957 0 S 132 133 Ras Al Jinz PDF Ras Al Jinz Visitor Center Archived from the original PDF on 10 September 2016 Shaffer 1999 p 245 Jarrige J F 1986 Excavations at Mehrgarh Nausharo Pakistan Archaeology 10 22 63 131 Shaffer and Liechtenstein 1995 1999 full citation needed Gallego Romero 2011 Bates J 1986 Approaching rice domestication in South Asia New evidence from Indus settlements in northern India Journal of Archaeological Science 78 22 193 201 doi 10 1016 j jas 2016 04 018 PMC 7773629 PMID 33414573 Bates Jennifer 21 November 2016 Rice farming in India much older than thought used as summer crop by Indus civilisation Research Retrieved 21 November 2016 Indus Valley civilization diet had dominance of meat finds study India Today 11 December 2020 Retrieved 22 July 2022 Indus Valley civilisation had meat heavy diets preference for beef reveals study Scroll 10 December 2020 Retrieved 22 July 2022 a b Suryanarayan Akshyeta Cubas Miriam Craig Oliver E Heron Carl P et al January 2021 Lipid residues in pottery from the Indus Civilisation in northwest India Journal of Archaeological Science 125 105291 doi 10 1016 j jas 2020 105291 ISSN 0305 4403 PMC 7829615 PMID 33519031 a b c Agnihotri Rajesh 1 June 2021 Microscopic biochemical and stable isotopic investigation of seven multi nutritional food balls from Indus archaeological site Rajasthan India Journal of Archaeological Science Reports 37 102917 doi 10 1016 j jasrep 2021 102917 ISSN 2352 409X S2CID 233578846 Tewari Mohita 25 March 2021 Harappan people ate multigrain high protein laddoos Study Times of India The Times of India Archived from the original on 27 February 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2021 Deciphering the Indus Script Harappa www harappa com Sanskrit has also contributed to Indus Civilization Deccan Herald 12 August 2012 a b c Heggarty amp Renfrew 2014 Cavalli Sforza Menozzi amp Piazza 1994 pp 221 222 Mukherjee et al 2001 Derenko 2013 Kivisild et al 1999 p 1331 a b Kivisild et al 1999 p 1333 a b Kumar 2004 Palanichamy 2015 p 645 Mukhopadhyay Bahata Ansumali 2021 Ancestral Dravidian languages in Indus Civilization ultraconserved Dravidian tooth word reveals deep linguistic ancestry and supports genetics Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 8 doi 10 1057 s41599 021 00868 w S2CID 236901972 Wells B 1999 An Introduction to Indus Writing Early Sites Research Society West Monograph Series Vol 2 Independence MO Mahadevan Iravatham 1977 The Indus Script Text Concordance And Tables New Delhi Archaeological Survey of India p 9 Shinde Vasant Willis Rick J 2014 A New Type of Inscribed Copper Plate from Indus Valley Harappan Civilisation Ancient Asia 5 doi 10 5334 aa 12317 Farmer Steve Sproat Richard Witzel Michael 2004 The Collapse of the Indus Script Thesis The Myth of a Literate Harappan Civilization PDF Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies 19 57 ISSN 1084 7561 Archived PDF from the original on 7 February 2005 These and other issues are addressed in Parpola 2005 Rao Rajesh P N Yadav Nisha Vahia Mayank N Joglekar Hrishikesh et al May 2009 Entropic Evidence for Linguistic Structure in the Indus Script Science 324 5931 1165 Bibcode 2009Sci 324 1165R doi 10 1126 science 1170391 PMID 19389998 S2CID 15565405 Indus Script Encodes Language Reveals New Study of Ancient Symbols Newswise Retrieved 5 June 2009 A Refutation of the Claimed Refutation of the Non linguistic Nature of Indus Symbols Invented Data Sets in the Statistical Paper of Rao et al Science 2009 Retrieved on 19 September 2009 full citation needed a b Conditional Entropy Cannot Distinguish Linguistic from Non linguistic Systems Retrieved on 19 September 2009 full citation needed Wright 2009 pp 281 282 Ratnagar 2004 a b Marshall 1931 pp 48 78 Possehl 2002 pp 141 156 a b Possehl 2002 pp 141 144 Srinivasan 1975 Srinivasan 1997 pp 180 181 Sullivan 1964 Hiltebeitel 2011 pp 399 432 Vilas Sangave 2001 Facets of Jainology Selected Research Papers on Jain Society Religion and Culture Mumbai Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 81 7154 839 2 Zimmer Heinrich 1969 Campbell Joseph ed Philosophies of India NY Princeton University Press pp 60 208 209 ISBN 978 0 691 01758 7 Thomas McEvilley 2002 The Shape of Ancient Thought Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies Allworth Communications Inc 816 pages ISBN 1 58115 203 5 a b Possehl 2002 pp 141 145 McIntosh 2008 pp 286 287 Marshall 1931 p 67 Possehl 2002 p 18 Thapar 2004 p 85 McIntosh 2008 pp 275 277 292 Possehl 2002 pp 152 157 176 McIntosh 2008 pp 293 299 akg images www akg images co uk Retrieved 14 January 2022 Robbins Schug G Gray K M Mushrif V Sankhyan A R November 2012 A Peaceful Realm Trauma and Social Differentiation at Harappa PDF International Journal of Paleopathology 2 2 3 136 147 doi 10 1016 j ijpp 2012 09 012 PMID 29539378 S2CID 3933522 Archived PDF from the original on 14 April 2021 Robbins Schug Gwen Blevins K Elaine Cox Brett Gray Kelsey Mushrif Tripathy V December 2013 Infection Disease and Biosocial Process at the End of the Indus Civilization PLOS ONE 8 12 e84814 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 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mitochondrial DNA lineages Curr Biol 9 22 1331 1334 doi 10 1016 s0960 9822 00 80057 3 PMID 10574762 S2CID 2821966 Kumar Dhavendra 2004 Genetic Disorders of the Indian Subcontinent Springer ISBN 978 1 4020 1215 0 Retrieved 25 November 2008 Lal B B 2002 The Sarasvati flows on MacDonald Glen 2011 Potential influence of the Pacific Ocean on the Indian summer monsoon and Harappan decline Quaternary International 229 1 2 140 148 Bibcode 2011QuInt 229 140M doi 10 1016 j quaint 2009 11 012 ISSN 1040 6182 Madella Marco Fuller Dorian Q 2006 Palaeoecology and the Harappan Civilisation of South Asia a reconsideration Quaternary Science Reviews 25 11 12 1283 1301 Bibcode 2006QSRv 25 1283M doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2005 10 012 ISSN 0277 3791 Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q eds 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture ISBN 9781884964985 Manuel Mark 2010 Chronology and Culture History in the Indus Valley In Gunawardhana P Adikari G Coningham R A E eds Sirinimal Lakdusinghe Felicitation Volume Battaramulla Neptune Publication pp 145 152 ISBN 9789550028054 Marshall John ed 1931 Mohenjo Daro and the Indus Civilization Being an Official Account of Archaeological Excavations at Mohenjo Daro Carried Out by the Government of India Between the Years 1922 and 1927 London Arthur Probsthain Marshall John ed 1996 1931 Mohenjo Daro and the Indus Civilization Being an Official Account of Archaeological Excavations at Mohenjo Daro Carried Out by the Government of India Between the Years 1922 and 1927 Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 1179 5 Mascarenhas Desmond D Raina Anupuma Aston Christopher E Sanghera Dharambir K 2015 Genetic and Cultural Reconstruction of the Migration of an Ancient Lineage BioMed Research International 2015 1 16 doi 10 1155 2015 651415 PMC 4605215 PMID 26491681 Masson Charles 1842 Narrative of Various Journeys in Balochistan Afghanistan and the Panjab Including a Residence in Those Countries from 1826 to 1838 Volume 1 London Richard Bentley Mathew K S 2017 Shipbuilding Navigation and the Portuguese in Pre modern India Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 58833 1 McIntosh Jane 2008 The Ancient Indus Valley New Perspectives ABC Clio ISBN 978 1 57607 907 2 Michon Daniel 2015 Archaeology and Religion in Early Northwest India History Theory Practice Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 32457 7 Morris A E J 1994 History of Urban Form Before the Industrial Revolutions 3rd ed New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 582 30154 2 Retrieved 20 May 2015 Mukherjee Namita Nebel Almut Oppenheim Ariella Majumder Partha P 2001 High resolution analysis of Y chromosomal polymorphisms reveals signatures of population movements from central Asia and West Asia into India Journal of Genetics 80 3 125 135 doi 10 1007 BF02717908 PMID 11988631 S2CID 13267463 Palanichamy Malliya Gounder 2015 West Eurasian mtDNA lineages in India an insight into the spread of the Dravidian language and the origins of the caste system Human Genetics 134 6 637 647 doi 10 1007 s00439 015 1547 4 PMID 25832481 S2CID 14202246 Parpola Asko 19 May 2005 Study of the Indus Script PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2006 50th ICES Tokyo Session Parpola Asko 2015 The Roots of Hinduism The Early Aryans and the Indus Civilisation Oxford University Press Ponton Camilo Giosan Liviu Eglinton Tim I Fuller Dorian Q et al 2012 Holocene aridification of India PDF Geophysical Research Letters 39 3 L03704 Bibcode 2012GeoRL 39 3704P doi 10 1029 2011GL050722 hdl 1912 5100 ISSN 0094 8276 Archived PDF from the original on 12 March 2020 Possehl Gregory L 2002 The Indus Civilization A Contemporary Perspective Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 1642 9 Possehl Gregory L 2002a Harappans and hunters economic interaction and specialization in prehistoric India In Morrison Kathleen D Junker Laura L eds Forager Traders in South and Southeast Asia Long Term Histories Cambridge University Press pp 62 76 ISBN 978 0 521 01636 0 Rashid Harunur England Emily Thompson Lonnie Polyak Leonid 2011 Late Glacial to Holocene Indian Summer Monsoon Variability Based upon Sediment Records Taken from the Bay of Bengal PDF Terrestrial Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences 22 2 215 228 Bibcode 2011TAOS 22 215R doi 10 3319 TAO 2010 09 17 02 TibXS ISSN 1017 0839 Archived PDF from the original on 10 March 2016 Ratnagar Shereen April 2004 Archaeology at the Heart of a Political Confrontation The Case of Ayodhya PDF Current Anthropology 45 2 239 259 doi 10 1086 381044 JSTOR 10 1086 381044 S2CID 149773944 Archived PDF from the original on 21 April 2018 Ratnagar Shereen 2006a Trading Encounters From the Euphrates to the Indus in the Bronze Age 2nd ed India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 566603 8 Ratnagar Shereen 2006b Understanding Harappa Civilization in the Greater Indus Valley New Delhi Tulika Books ISBN 978 81 89487 02 7 Sarkar Anindya Mukherjee Arati Deshpande Bera M K Das B et al May 2016 Oxygen isotope in archaeological bioapatites from India Implications to climate change and decline of Bronze Age Harappan civilization Scientific Reports 6 1 26555 Bibcode 2016NatSR 626555S doi 10 1038 srep26555 PMC 4879637 PMID 27222033 Shaffer Jim G 1992 The Indus Valley Baluchistan and Helmand Traditions Neolithic Through Bronze Age In R W Ehrich ed Chronologies in Old World Archaeology Second ed Chicago University of Chicago Press Shaffer Jim G 1999 Migration Philology and South Asian Archaeology In Bronkhorst Deshpande eds Aryan and Non Aryan in South Asia Cambridge Harvard University Dept of Sanskrit and Indian Studies ISBN 978 1 888789 04 1 Singh Kavita The Museum Is National Chapter 4 in Mathur Saloni and Singh Kavita eds No Touching No Spitting No Praying The Museum in South Asia 2015 Routledge PDF on academia edu nb this is different to the article by the same author with the same title in India International Centre Quarterly vol 29 no 3 4 2002 pp 176 196 JSTOR which does not mention the IVC objects Singh Sakshi et al 2016 Dissecting the influence of Neolithic demic diffusion on Indian Y chromosome pool through J2 M172 haplogroup Scientific Reports 6 19157 Bibcode 2016NatSR 619157S doi 10 1038 srep19157 PMC 4709632 PMID 26754573 Singh Upinder 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India ISBN 978 81 317 1120 0 Srinivasan Doris 1975 The so called Proto Siva seal from Mohenjo Daro An iconological assessment Archives of Asian Art 29 47 58 JSTOR 20062578 Srinivasan Doris Meth 1997 Many Heads Arms and Eyes Origin Meaning and Form in Multiplicity in Indian Art Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10758 8 Staubwasser M Sirocko F Grootes P M Segl M 2003 Climate change at the 4 2 ka BP termination of the Indus valley civilization and Holocene south Asian monsoon variability Geophysical Research Letters 30 8 1425 Bibcode 2003GeoRL 30 1425S doi 10 1029 2002GL016822 ISSN 0094 8276 S2CID 129178112 Sullivan Herbert P 1964 A Re Examination of the Religion of the Indus Civilization History of Religions 4 1 115 125 doi 10 1086 462498 JSTOR 1061875 S2CID 162278147 Thapar Romila 2004 Early India From the Origins to AD 1300 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24225 8 Thapar Romila ed 2006 the Making of the Aryan New Delhi National Book Trust Wright Rita P 2009 The Ancient Indus Urbanism Economy and Society Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57219 4 Retrieved 29 September 2013 Further reading EditAllchin Bridget 1997 Origins of a Civilization The Prehistory and Early Archaeology of South Asia New York Viking Aronovsky Ilona Gopinath Sujata 2005 The Indus Valley Chicago Heinemann Bar Matthews Miryam Ayalon Avner 2011 Mid Holocene climate variations revealed by high resolution speleothem records from Soreq Cave Israel and their correlation with cultural changes The Holocene 21 1 163 171 Bibcode 2011Holoc 21 163B doi 10 1177 0959683610384165 ISSN 0959 6836 S2CID 129380409 Basham A L 1967 The Wonder that was India London Sidgwick amp Jackson pp 11 14 Chakrabarti D K 2004 Indus Civilization Sites in India New Discoveries Mumbai Marg Publications ISBN 978 81 85026 63 3 Dani Ahmad Hassan 1984 Short History of Pakistan Book 1 University of Karachi Dani Ahmad Hassan Mohen J P eds 1996 History of Humanity Volume III From the Third Millennium to the Seventh Century BC New York Paris Routledge UNESCO ISBN 978 0 415 09306 4 Dikshit K N 2013 Origin of Early Harappan Cultures in the Sarasvati Valley Recent Archaeological Evidence and Radiometric Dates PDF Journal of Indian Ocean Archaeology 9 Archived from the original PDF on 18 January 2017 Gupta S P ed 1995 The lost Sarasvati and the Indus Civilisation Jodhpur Kusumanjali Prakashan Gupta S P 1996 The Indus Saraswati Civilization Origins Problems and Issues Delhi Pratibha Prakashan ISBN 978 81 85268 46 0 Kathiroli et al 2004 Recent Marine Archaeological Finds in Khambhat Gujarat Journal of Indian Ocean Archaeology 1 141 149 Kenoyer Jonathan Mark Heuston Kimberly 2005 The Ancient South Asian World Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517422 9 Lahiri Nayanjot ed 2000 The Decline and Fall of the Indus Civilisation Delhi Permanent Black ISBN 978 81 7530 034 7 Lal B B 1998 India 1947 1997 New Light on the Indus Civilization New Delhi Aryan Books International ISBN 978 81 7305 129 6 Lal B B 1997 The Earliest Civilisation of South Asia Rise Maturity and Decline Lazaridis Iosif et al 2016 Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the ancient Near East Nature 536 7617 419 424 Bibcode 2016Natur 536 419L bioRxiv 10 1101 059311 doi 10 1038 nature19310 PMC 5003663 PMID 27459054 Mani B R 2008 Kashmir Neolithic and Early Harappan A Linkage PDF Pragdhara 18 229 247 Archived from the original PDF on 18 January 2017 Retrieved 17 January 2017 McIntosh Jane 2001 A Peaceful Realm The Rise And Fall of the Indus Civilization Boulder Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 3532 2 Mirabal S Regueiro M Cadenas AM Cavalli Sforza LL et al 2009 Y Chromosome distribution within the geo linguistic landscape of northwestern Russia European Journal of Human Genetics 17 10 1260 1273 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2009 6 PMC 2986641 PMID 19259129 Mughal Mohammad Rafique 1997 Ancient Cholistan Archaeology and Architecture Ferozesons ISBN 978 969 0 01350 7 Narasimhan Vagheesh M Anthony David Mallory James Reich David et al September 2019 The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia Science 365 6457 eaat7487 bioRxiv 10 1101 292581 doi 10 1126 science aat7487 PMC 6822619 PMID 31488661 Pamjav Horolma Feher Tibor Nemeth Endre Padar Zsolt 2012 Brief communication new Y chromosome binary markers improve phylogenetic resolution within haplogroup R1a1 American Journal of Physical Anthropology 149 4 611 615 doi 10 1002 ajpa 22167 PMID 23115110 Pittman Holly 1984 Art of the Bronze Age southeastern Iran western Central Asia and the Indus Valley New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 365 7 Poznik G David 2016 Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1 244 worldwide Y chromosome sequences Nature Genetics 48 6 593 599 doi 10 1038 ng 3559 PMC 4884158 PMID 27111036 Rao Shikaripura Ranganatha 1991 Dawn and Devolution of the Indus Civilisation New Delhi Aditya Prakashan ISBN 978 81 85179 74 2 Semino O Passarino G Oefner PJ 2000 The genetic legacy of Paleolithic Homo sapiens sapiens in extant Europeans A Y chromosome perspective Science 290 5494 1155 1159 Bibcode 2000Sci 290 1155S doi 10 1126 science 290 5494 1155 PMID 11073453 Sengupta S Zhivotovsky LA King R Mehdi SQ et al 2005 Polarity and Temporality of High Resolution Y Chromosome Distributions in India Identify Both Indigenous and Exogenous Expansions and Reveal Minor Genetic Influence of Central Asian Pastoralists American Journal of Human Genetics 78 2 202 221 doi 10 1086 499411 PMC 1380230 PMID 16400607 Shaffer Jim G 1995 Cultural tradition and Palaeoethnicity in South Asian Archaeology In George Erdosy ed Indo Aryans of Ancient South Asia Berlin u a de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 014447 5 Thompson Thomas J 2005 Ancient Stateless Civilization Bronze Age India and the State in History PDF The Independent Review 10 3 365 384 Archived PDF from the original on 3 February 2010 Retrieved 8 June 2020 Underhill Peter A Myres Natalie M Rootsi Siiri Metspalu Mait et al 2009 Separating the post Glacial coancestry of European and Asian Y chromosomes within haplogroup R1a European Journal of Human Genetics 18 4 479 484 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2009 194 PMC 2987245 PMID 19888303 Underhill Peter A et al 2015 The phylogenetic amp geographic structure of Y chromosome haplogroup R1a European Journal of Human Genetics 23 1 124 131 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2014 50 ISSN 1018 4813 PMC 4266736 PMID 24667786 Wells R S 2001 The Eurasian Heartland A continental perspective on Y chromosome diversity Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 98 18 10244 10249 Bibcode 2001PNAS 9810244W doi 10 1073 pnas 171305098 PMC 56946 PMID 11526236 Willey Phillips 1958 Method and Theory in American Archaeology External links Edit Wikivoyage has a 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