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Rakhigarhi

Rakhigarhi or Rakhi Garhi is a village and an archaeological site in the Hisar District of the northern Indian state of Haryana, situated about 150 km northwest of Delhi. It is located in the Ghaggar River plain,[6] some 27 km from the seasonal Ghaggar river, and belonged to the Indus Valley civilisation, being part of the pre-Harappan (7000-3300 BCE), early Harappan (3300-2600 BCE), and the mature phase (2600-1900 BCE) of the Indus Valley Civilisation.[7]

Rakhigarhi
Shown within Haryana
Rakhigarhi (India)
Rakhigarhi (South Asia)
Alternative nameRakhi Garhi
LocationHaryana, India
Coordinates29°17′35″N 76°6′51″E / 29.29306°N 76.11417°E / 29.29306; 76.11417
TypeSettlement
Area80–105 hectares (0.80–1.05 km2; 0.31–0.41 sq mi)[1][2][3][4][5][6][note 1]
History
CulturesIndus Valley civilization
Site notes
Excavation dates1963, 1997–2000, 2012–2016, 2021–present[web 1]

It was among the largest settlements of the ancient civilisation, and most scholars believe it to have been between 80 hectares and 100+ hectares in area.[1][2][3][4][5][6][note 1] Other related excavation sites in the area are Mitathal and the smaller site Lohari Ragho, which are still awaiting excavation.

Initial excavations at the site happened in the 1960s, followed by further excavations in the late 1990s, however more sustained excavations have taken place in the past decade.[web 1] though much of the area is yet to be excavated[8][web 2] and published.[9]

DNA-tests by Shinde et al. (2019) on a single skeleton show that the DNA did not include any traces of steppe ancestry, in line with the Aryan migration theory, which says that Indo-Aryans migrated to India from the steppes after the Harappan civilization had started to disintegrate.[10][11]

Site characteristics edit

Location edit

It is located in the Ghaggar plain,[6] some 27 km from the seasonal Ghaggar river. Today, Rakhigarhi is a small village in Haryana State, India.[web 3] According to Jane McIntosh, Rakhigarhi is located in the valley of the prehistoric Drishadvati River that originated in Siwalik Hills.[12] Chautang is a tributary of Sarsuti river which in turn is a tributary of Ghaggar river.[web 4][web 5]

Site size and number of mounds edit

Most scholars, including Gregory Possehl, Jonathan Mark Kenoyer, Raymond Allchin and Rita P. Wright believe Rakhigari to have been between 80 hectares and 100+ hectares in size.[4][3][1][5][6][2][note 1] According to Nath et al. (2015), "[a]rchaeological remains at Rakhigari extend over a radius of [300 hectares (3.0 km2)] encompassing a set of seven mounds of which 1 to 5 are integrated while a few are removed from each other."[13]

The mounds are numbered following the naming convention of "RGR-x" e.g. RGR-1 to RGR-11.[web 6] Untill 2014, seven mounds were known. The 2014 excavation discovered two more mounds, RGR-8 and RGR-9, situated east and west of the main site, and largely destroyed for cultivation. According to Vasant Shinde each mound has a size size of 25 hectares, taking the total site size to 350 hectares (3.5 km2), and thus making Rakhigarhi largest Indus Valley Civilization site by overtaking Mohenjodaro (300 hectares) by 50 hectares.[web 7][web 8] The 2016 excavation claimed to have found two more mounds, RGR-10 and RGR-11, making the total number of mounds 11.[web 8]

Dating edit

According to Garge Tejas the earliest settlements in Rakhigarhi predate the Indus Valley Civilization.[7] According to Possehl not all mounds in Rakhigarhi belong to the same Indus Valley settlement, stating that "RGR-6, a Sothi-Siswal site known as Arda, was probably a separate settlement."[1] Mounds RGR1 to RGR-6 are residential sites belonging to "pre-formation age early Harappan" era, while mound RGR-7 is a burial site where human skeletons were found.[web 9]

ASI has carbon dated mound labelled RGR-1, RGR-2, RGR-6 and RGR-7. The RGR-6 has two layers of Preharappan Phase dating to 5,640 years before present (BP) and 5,440 (BP). The RGR-1 has Early Harappan Phase dating to 5,200 and 4,570 years BP. The RGR-2 also has Early Harappan Phase dated to 5,200 and 4,570 years as well as two additional samples belonging to Mature Harappan Phase dating to 4,040 and 3,900 years BP.[web 9] RGR-7, which is a cemetery or a burial site from Mature Harappan Phase, dates back to 4600 BP.[10][web 10]

In 2014 six radiocarbon datings from excavations at Rakhigarhi between 1997 and 2000 were published by archaeologist Amarendra Nath, corresponding to the Pre-formative, Early Harappan, and Mature Harappan phases. Mound RGR-6 revealed a Pre-formative stage designated as Sothi Phase with the following two datings:   and   years before present, converted to   B.C.E. and   B.C.E.[14]

Nearby sites and cultures edit

Rakhigarhi, being the largest town and regional trade centre of IVC era, is surrounded by numerous IVC sites nearby in Haryana, Rajasthan and Punjab along the Gagghar-Hakra river course. The important ones among those are the Bhirrana (4 phases of IVC with earliest dated to 8th-7th millennium BCE) 86 km northwest,[15][16] Kunal (belonging to Kunal cultural which is the cultural ancestor of Rehman Dheri site) 75 km northwest,[17][18] Siswal (belonging to Sothi-Siswal culture dated to 3800 BC, contemporaneous to Early-Harappan Phase) 75 km west,[19][20] and Kalibangan (another large regional IVC city with several phases starting from Early harappan phase) 235 km west,[21] and few more.

There are many other important archaeological sites in this area, in the old river valley to the east of the Ghaggar Plain. Among them are Kalibangan, Kunal, Balu, Bhirrana, and Banawali.[14]

Excavations edit

By 2020, only 5% of the site had been excavated by the ASI and Deccan College.[web 2]

Chronology of excavations edit

While the earliest excavation of IVC sites started from Harappa in 1921-1922 and Mohenjo-daro in 1931, the excavations at Rakhigarhi were first carried out in 1969, followed by more excavations in 1997–98, 1998–99 and 1999–2000, between 2011–16 and 2021 onward. There are 11 mounds in Rakhigarhi which are named RGR-1 to RGR-11, of which RGR-5 is thickly populated by establishment of Rakhishahpur village and is not available for excavations. RGR-1 to RGR-3, RGR6 to RGR9 and some part of RGR-4 are available for excavations.[web 6][web 8][22][web 7][web 9]

In 1963, Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) began excavations at this site, and, though little has been published about the excavations.[23][24]

In 1969, Kurukshetra University's team studied and documented the site led by its Dean of Indic studies Dr. Suraj Bhan.[25]

In 1997–98, 1998–99 and 1999–2000, ASI team began to excavate the site again, which was led by its director Dr. Amrender Nath who published his findings in scholarly journals.[25][26] After 2000, excavations were stopped for years because of a CBI investigation on the misuse of funds.[27] Much of the findings are donated to the National Museum, New Delhi.

From 2011 to 2016, Deccan College carried out several substantial excavations led by its then Vice Chancellor and archaeologist Dr. Vasant Shinde, several members of the team published their findings in various academic journals.[28][29]

From 2021 onward, more excavation by ASI commenced. Central University of Haryana and Dr Vasant Shinde also expressed interest in commencing excavation.[web 9]

Discoveries edit

 
The skeleton of a female found at Rakhigarhi and now on display in the National Museum.

Findings confirm both early and mature Harappan phases and include 4,600-year-old human skeletons, fortification and bricks.[web 2]

Planned city edit

The ASI's detailed excavation of the site revealed the size of the lost city and recovered numerous artefacts, some over 5,000 years old. Rakhigarhi was occupied at Early Harappan times.[8][22] Evidence of paved roads, drainage system, large rainwater collection, storage system, terracotta bricks, statue production, and skilled working of bronze and precious metals have been uncovered.[citation needed] Jewellery, including bangles made from terracotta, conch shells, gold, and semi-precious stones, have also been found.[30]

Digging so far reveals a well planned city with 1.92 m wide roads, a bit wider than in Kalibangan. The pottery is similar to Kalibangan and Banawali. Pits surrounded by walls have been found, which are thought to be for sacrificial or some religious ceremonies. There are brick lined drains to handle sewage from the houses. Terracotta statues, weights, bronze artifacts, comb, copper fish hooks, needles and terracotta seals have also been found. A bronze vessel has been found which is decorated with gold and silver. A gold foundry with about 3000 unpolished semi-precious stones has been found. Many tools used for polishing these stones and a furnace were found there. A burial site has been found with 11 skeletons, with their heads in the north direction. Near the heads of these skeletons, utensils for everyday use were kept. The three female skeletons have shell bangles on their left wrists. Near one female skeleton, a gold armlet has been found. In addition semi precious stones have been found lying near the head, suggesting that they were part of some sort of necklace.

Granary edit

A granary belonging to mature Harappan phase (2600 BCE to 2000 BCE) has been found here. Granary is made up of mud-bricks with a floor of ramped earth plastered with mud. It has 7 rectangular or square chambers. Significant traces of lime & decomposed grass are found on the lower portion of the granary wall indicating that it can also be the storehouse of grains with lime used as insecticide & grass used to prevent entry of moisture. Looking at the size, it appears to be a public granary or a private granary of elites.[31]

Tools edit

Hunting tools like copper hafts and fish hooks have been found here. Presence of various toys like mini wheels, miniature lids, sling balls, animal figurines indicates a prevalence of toy culture. Signs of flourishing trade can be seen by the excavation of stamps, jewelry and 'chert' weights. Weights found here are similar to weights found at many other IVC sites confirming presence of standardized weight systems.[32]

Culture, clothing and worship edit

Fire altars and apsidal structures were revealed in Rakhigarhi.[web 6][dead link]

Cotton cloth traces preserved on silver or bronze objects were known from Rakhigarhi, Chanhudaro and Harappa.[33] An impressive[quantify] number of stamps seals were also found at this site.[8]

Cemetery and burial sites edit

A cemetery of Mature Harappan period is discovered at Rakhigarhi, with eight graves found. Often brick covered grave pits had wooden coffin in one case.[8] Different type of grave pits were undercut to form an earthen overhang and body was placed below this; and then top of grave was filled with bricks to form a roof structure over the grave.[9]

So far 53 burial sites with 46 skeletons have been discovered. Anthropological examination done on 37 skeletons revealed 17 to be of adults, 8 to be of subadults while the age of 12 skeletons could not be verified. Sex detection of 17 skeletons was successful out of which 7 were male and 10 female skeletons. Most of the burials were typical burials with skeletons in a supine position. Atypical burials had skeletons in a prone position. Some graves are just pits while some are brick lined and contain pottery. Some of them also had votive pots with animal remains symbolizing offerings to the dead. Bone remains of secondary burials were not charred hence ruling out the possibility of cremation practices. While these burials retained many of the Harappan features, group burials and prone position burials are distinct. Paleo-parasitical studies and DNA analysis to determine the lineage is being undertaken.[34][35]

Parasite eggs which were once existed in the stomach of those buried were found in the burial sites along with human skeletons. Analysis of Human aDNA obtained from human bones as well as analysis of parasite and animal DNA will be done to assert origins of these people.[36][37]

Skeleton finds edit

In April 2015, four 4,600-year-old complete human skeletons were excavated from mound RGR-7. These skeletons belonged to two male adults, one female adult (classified as 'I6113') and one child.[10] Pottery with grains of food as well as shell bangles were found around these skeletons.[38][web 2]

  Photo of the skeleton of "Rakhigarhi love birds" buried together with male (11A) facing the woman (11B), with their feet pointing south and head towards north.[39]

Two of the skeletons, a man between 35 and 40 years old and women in early 20s, who died around the same time. They were found buried together side by side with men's head facing the women. Their ceremonial burial indicates that they were not in illicit relationship and the lovebirds were likely married to each other. Pots found in their grave likely carried food and water as offering to the dead. The agate found near he collar bone of the male was likely part of a necklace.[40][39] The male was 177 cm (5 ft 9+12 in) tall and female was 171 cm (5 ft 7+12 in). Their skeleton had no abnormalities, injuries or sign of disease. They were both likely "quite healthy" at the time of their death.[41]

Shinde et al. (2019) have carried out DNA-tests on a single skeleton. Results announced in September 2018, and a paper published in Cell Magazine in 2019, show that the DNA did not include any traces of steppe ancestry, which is in line with the Aryan migration theory, which says that Indo-Aryans migrated to India from the steppes after the Harappan civilization had started to disintegrate.[10][11][web 11][web 12][42][43][44]

The DNA of a single male skeleton (classified as 'I4411') shows affinity with present-day subaltern South Indian, Tamil tribal populations,[45] most notably the Irula people.[46] A total of 61 skeletons were found till 2016.

As the skeletons were excavated scientifically without any contamination, archaeologists think that with the help of latest technology on these skeletons and DNA obtained,[47] it is possible to determine how Harappans looked like 4500 years ago.[web 10] The average height is estimated to have been 175.8 cm (5 ft 9 in) for men and 166.1 cm (5 ft 5+12 in) for women.[48]

Site conservation and development edit

Endangered heritage site edit

In May 2012, the Global Heritage Fund declared Rakhigarhi one of the ten most endangered heritage sites in Asia facing the threat of irreparable loss and destruction due to development pressures, insufficient management and looting.[web 8][49] A 2012 study by the Sunday Times found that the site is not being looked after; the iron boundary wall is broken, and villagers sell the artefacts they dig out of the site and parts of site are now being encroached by private houses.[50] Due to the lack of site protection the site is being destroyed by soil erosion, encroachments, illegal sand lifting, theft of archaeological artifacts for illegal sale. It is a punishable crime to sell or buy artifacts found in the ancient sites. 80% of mound 6 – a residential site of Harappan Era and 7 which is a burial site where 4 human skeletons were recovered in 2015 have been destroyed due to cultivation and soil mining.[web 8]

Site encroachments edit

Parts of mounds R4 and R5 have been encroached by the villagers who have built 152 houses.[web 2] The ASI has only 83.5 acres of the 350-hectare site that entails 11 archaeological mounds, due to encroachments and pending court cases for the removal of the encroachments.[web 2]

Site rehabilitation and preservation edit

In February 2020, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced that the site of Rakhigarhi would be developed as an iconic site.[51] ASI has commenced the plan to remove encroachments from the site, including 152 houses on the R4 and R5 mounds. Villages, whose houses in the site will be removed, will be relocated and rehabilitated in the housing flats on another location.[web 2]

Site museum and lake edit

Rakhigarhi, which is an Indus Valley civilisation site, also has a museum developed by the state government.[52] There is also Haryana Rural Antique Museum 60 km away, which is maintained by CCS HAU in its Gandhi Bhawan, exhibits evolution of agriculture and vanishing antiques.[53] Jahaj Kothi Museum, named after George Thomas, is located inside Firoz Shah Palace Complex and maintained by Archaeological Survey of India.[54]

To develop Rakhigarhi as the global heritage, two johad (water bodies) across the road to museum are developed as lakes. The lake has been deepened by digging and traditional ghats with burji on the banks of lake have been constructed. A park is developed the spare land of the lake. A walking track around the lake, with shady trees and fruit trees, has been constructed for the tourists.[55] The traditional ghats represent the past scenario when paleo-Drishadvati river use to flow through Rakhigarhi which had ghats for transporting goods for trade, via Lothal port and Dholavira, as far as Mesopotamia (ancient cities of Elam and Sumer).[56]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Size:
    • Allchin & Erdosy 1995, p. 78: "Rakhigarhi at 80 hectares is the largest site followed by Banawali at 25 hectares."
    • Kenoyer 1998, p. 49: "Within a few hundred years the thriving town had grown six times larger, covering an area of over 150 hectares [...] civilization: Mohenjo-daro (+200 ha), Harappa (+ 150 ha), Ganweriwala and Rakhigarhi (+80 ha) and Dholavira (100 ha)."
    • Possehl 2002, p. 72: "The site is about 17 meters in height. The southern face of the mounds is rather abrupt and steep. The northern side slopes down to the surrounding plain. The contours of the site have led the excavator to divide up the place into five mounds (RGR-1 through 5). RGR-6, a Sothi-Siswal site known as Arda, was probably a separate settlement. I have visited Rakhigarhi and believe that it is 80 hectares in size."
    • Heitzman 2008, p. 35: "They include Mohenjodaro (with a city core of about 100 hectares, and suburbs possibly covering more than 200 hectares) in Sind; Harappa (more than 150 hectares) in the center of Pakistani Punjab; Dholavira (more than 100 hectares) in Gujarat; Ganweriwala (82 hectares) in Pakistani Punjab near the border with Rajasthan; and Rakhigarhi (between 80 and 105 hectares) in Haryana."
    • Wright 2009, p. 133: "Rakhigarhi was over 100 hectares in size."
    • Coningham & Young 2015, p. 183 Quote: 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."

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c Coningham & Young (2015), p. 183.
  3. ^ a b c Kenoyer (1998), p. 49.
  4. ^ a b c Allchin & Erdosy (1995), p. 78.
  5. ^ a b c Heitzman (2008), p. 35.
  6. ^ a b c d e Wright (2009), p. 133.
  7. ^ a b Garge (2010), p. 15.
  8. ^ a b c d Possehl (2002), pp. 63, 71, 72.
  9. ^ a b McIntosh (2008), p. 215, 293.
  10. ^ a b c d Shinde et al. (2019).
  11. ^ a b Joseph (2019).
  12. ^ McIntosh (2008), p. 76.
  13. ^ Nath et al. (2015).
  14. ^ a b Nath, Garge & Law (2014), p. 84.
  15. ^ Mani (2008), p. 237-238.
  16. ^ Sarkar et al. (2016), p. 2-3.
  17. ^ Charles Keith Maisels, Early Civilizations of the Old World: The Formative Histories of Egypt, The Levant, Mesopotamia, India and China. Routledge, 2003 ISBN 1134837305
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  20. ^ The Harappan Civilisation: Its Sub-cultures, Daily Pioneer, 10 May 2018.
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  25. ^ a b Bhartesh Singh Thakur, "Former Archaeological Survey director sentenced to jail for fraud", Hindustan Times, 15 October 2015.
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  32. ^ . Hindustan Times. 15 April 2015. Archived from the original on 15 April 2015.
  33. ^ McIntosh (2008), p. 293, 333.
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  36. ^ "Scientists to study parasite eggs in Harappan graves". The Times of India. 12 January 2014.
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  38. ^ . Hindustan Times. 15 April 2015. Archived from the original on 15 April 2015.
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  40. ^ Ancient lovers found in Indian burial site mystify and intrigue archaeologists, CNN, January 10, 2019.
  41. ^ Harappa grave of ancient 'couple' reveals secrets, BBC, 9 January 2019.
  42. ^ Mahalakshmi, R. (October 2019). "DNA analysis of Harappan skeleton from Rakhigarhi: Thin evidence". Frontline. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  43. ^ "Scientists Part of Studies Supporting Aryan Migration Endorse Party Line Instead". The Wire. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  44. ^ Das, Biplab (September 2019). "Where did the Indus Valley people come from?". Nature India. doi:10.1038/nindia.2019.121 (inactive 31 January 2024). Retrieved 17 April 2020.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)
  45. ^ Narasimhan, V. M.; et al. (2019). "Supplementary Materials for The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia". Science. 365 (6457): 307–308. doi:10.1126/science.aat7487. PMC 6822619. PMID 31488661.
  46. ^ Narasimhan, V. M.; et al. (2019). "Supplementary Materials for The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia". Science. 365 (6457): 209. doi:10.1126/science.aat7487. PMC 6822619. PMID 31488661. S2CID 201845485.
  47. ^ "Why Hindutva is Out of Steppe with new discoveries about the Indus Valley people". 6 September 2018.
  48. ^ Nath A., Walimbe S.R., Garge T.M., Mushrif-Tripathy V., Dehuri R., and Malik A. (2015) Harappan interments at Rakhigarhi, Haryana. Man and Environment, XL: 9–32.
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  50. ^ Archana, Khare Ghose (3 June 2012). "Can Rakhigarhi, the largest Indus Valley Civilisation site be saved?". Sunday Times. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  51. ^ "Rakhigarhi to be developed as iconic site".
  52. ^ Harappan museum at Rakhigarhi
  53. ^ (PDF). revenueharyana.gov.in. Government OF Haryana. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 May 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  54. ^ Jahaj Kothi museum
  55. ^ Lake being built in Rakhigarhi (english translation of original hindi news "चंडीगढ़ की सुखना लेक की तर्ज पर राखीगढ़ी में बन रही झील"), Dainik Jagran, 16 Sept 2021.
  56. ^ DNA analysis of Harappan skeleton from Rakhigarhi: Thin evidence, Frontline, October 11, 2019.

Sources edit

Printed sources
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  6. ^ a b c Archaeological Survey of, India. "Indian Archaeology 1997-98" (PDF). Excavation at Rakhigarhi. Archaeological Survey of INdia. Retrieved 17 July 2012.
  7. ^ a b Subramanian, T. S. (27 March 2014). "Rakhigarhi, the biggest Harappan site". The Hindu.
  8. ^ a b c d e Deepender Deswal (2015), Rakhigarhi site being plundered due to lack of protection, The Tribune India, Apr 16, 2015.
  9. ^ a b c d Deepender Deswal (2018), Harappan site in Hisar draws interest of archaeologists, The Tribune India, September 18, 2021.
  10. ^ a b T.S. Subramanian (2015), "Virtual Harappans to come alive". The Hindu. 3 May 2015.
  11. ^ "4500-year-old DNA from Rakhigarhi reveals evidence that will unsettle Hindutva nationalists". India Today. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
  12. ^ Bal, Hartosh Singh. "What media reporting on ancient DNA results says about our times". The Caravan. Retrieved 7 December 2019.

External links edit

  • Photo of the Rakhigarhi love birds buried together.
  • BBC report with photo of the Rakhigarhi love birds buried together.
  • 2015 Man and Environment Journal article on Rakhigarhi burials.
  • Haryana Samvad Newsletter: Detailed report on Rakhigarhi with color photographs, page 1-15.
  • "Harappa's greatest centre sheds light on our today". The Sunday Guardian. 16 September 2012.

rakhigarhi, rakhi, garhi, village, archaeological, site, hisar, district, northern, indian, state, haryana, situated, about, northwest, delhi, located, ghaggar, river, plain, some, from, seasonal, ghaggar, river, belonged, indus, valley, civilisation, being, p. Rakhigarhi or Rakhi Garhi is a village and an archaeological site in the Hisar District of the northern Indian state of Haryana situated about 150 km northwest of Delhi It is located in the Ghaggar River plain 6 some 27 km from the seasonal Ghaggar river and belonged to the Indus Valley civilisation being part of the pre Harappan 7000 3300 BCE early Harappan 3300 2600 BCE and the mature phase 2600 1900 BCE of the Indus Valley Civilisation 7 RakhigarhiShown within HaryanaShow map of HaryanaRakhigarhi India Show map of IndiaRakhigarhi South Asia Show map of South AsiaAlternative nameRakhi GarhiLocationHaryana IndiaCoordinates29 17 35 N 76 6 51 E 29 29306 N 76 11417 E 29 29306 76 11417TypeSettlementArea80 105 hectares 0 80 1 05 km2 0 31 0 41 sq mi 1 2 3 4 5 6 note 1 HistoryCulturesIndus Valley civilizationSite notesExcavation dates1963 1997 2000 2012 2016 2021 present web 1 It was among the largest settlements of the ancient civilisation and most scholars believe it to have been between 80 hectares and 100 hectares in area 1 2 3 4 5 6 note 1 Other related excavation sites in the area are Mitathal and the smaller site Lohari Ragho which are still awaiting excavation Initial excavations at the site happened in the 1960s followed by further excavations in the late 1990s however more sustained excavations have taken place in the past decade web 1 though much of the area is yet to be excavated 8 web 2 and published 9 DNA tests by Shinde et al 2019 on a single skeleton show that the DNA did not include any traces of steppe ancestry in line with the Aryan migration theory which says that Indo Aryans migrated to India from the steppes after the Harappan civilization had started to disintegrate 10 11 Contents 1 Site characteristics 1 1 Location 1 2 Site size and number of mounds 1 3 Dating 1 4 Nearby sites and cultures 2 Excavations 2 1 Chronology of excavations 2 2 Discoveries 2 2 1 Planned city 2 2 2 Granary 2 2 3 Tools 2 2 4 Culture clothing and worship 2 2 5 Cemetery and burial sites 2 2 6 Skeleton finds 3 Site conservation and development 3 1 Endangered heritage site 3 2 Site encroachments 3 3 Site rehabilitation and preservation 3 4 Site museum and lake 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksSite characteristics editLocation edit It is located in the Ghaggar plain 6 some 27 km from the seasonal Ghaggar river Today Rakhigarhi is a small village in Haryana State India web 3 According to Jane McIntosh Rakhigarhi is located in the valley of the prehistoric Drishadvati River that originated in Siwalik Hills 12 Chautang is a tributary of Sarsuti river which in turn is a tributary of Ghaggar river web 4 web 5 Site size and number of mounds edit Most scholars including Gregory Possehl Jonathan Mark Kenoyer Raymond Allchin and Rita P Wright believe Rakhigari to have been between 80 hectares and 100 hectares in size 4 3 1 5 6 2 note 1 According to Nath et al 2015 a rchaeological remains at Rakhigari extend over a radius of 300 hectares 3 0 km2 encompassing a set of seven mounds of which 1 to 5 are integrated while a few are removed from each other 13 The mounds are numbered following the naming convention of RGR x e g RGR 1 to RGR 11 web 6 Untill 2014 seven mounds were known The 2014 excavation discovered two more mounds RGR 8 and RGR 9 situated east and west of the main site and largely destroyed for cultivation According to Vasant Shinde each mound has a size size of 25 hectares taking the total site size to 350 hectares 3 5 km2 and thus making Rakhigarhi largest Indus Valley Civilization site by overtaking Mohenjodaro 300 hectares by 50 hectares web 7 web 8 The 2016 excavation claimed to have found two more mounds RGR 10 and RGR 11 making the total number of mounds 11 web 8 Dating edit See also Periodisation of IVC Archaeological pottery culture in India and Black and red ware According to Garge Tejas the earliest settlements in Rakhigarhi predate the Indus Valley Civilization 7 According to Possehl not all mounds in Rakhigarhi belong to the same Indus Valley settlement stating that RGR 6 a Sothi Siswal site known as Arda was probably a separate settlement 1 Mounds RGR1 to RGR 6 are residential sites belonging to pre formation age early Harappan era while mound RGR 7 is a burial site where human skeletons were found web 9 ASI has carbon dated mound labelled RGR 1 RGR 2 RGR 6 and RGR 7 The RGR 6 has two layers of Preharappan Phase dating to 5 640 years before present BP and 5 440 BP The RGR 1 has Early Harappan Phase dating to 5 200 and 4 570 years BP The RGR 2 also has Early Harappan Phase dated to 5 200 and 4 570 years as well as two additional samples belonging to Mature Harappan Phase dating to 4 040 and 3 900 years BP web 9 RGR 7 which is a cemetery or a burial site from Mature Harappan Phase dates back to 4600 BP 10 web 10 In 2014 six radiocarbon datings from excavations at Rakhigarhi between 1997 and 2000 were published by archaeologist Amarendra Nath corresponding to the Pre formative Early Harappan and Mature Harappan phases Mound RGR 6 revealed a Pre formative stage designated as Sothi Phase with the following two datings 6420 110 displaystyle 6420 pm 110 nbsp and 6230 320 displaystyle 6230 pm 320 nbsp years before present converted to 4470 110 displaystyle 4470 pm 110 nbsp B C E and 4280 320 displaystyle 4280 pm 320 nbsp B C E 14 Nearby sites and cultures edit Rakhigarhi being the largest town and regional trade centre of IVC era is surrounded by numerous IVC sites nearby in Haryana Rajasthan and Punjab along the Gagghar Hakra river course The important ones among those are the Bhirrana 4 phases of IVC with earliest dated to 8th 7th millennium BCE 86 km northwest 15 16 Kunal belonging to Kunal cultural which is the cultural ancestor of Rehman Dheri site 75 km northwest 17 18 Siswal belonging to Sothi Siswal culture dated to 3800 BC contemporaneous to Early Harappan Phase 75 km west 19 20 and Kalibangan another large regional IVC city with several phases starting from Early harappan phase 235 km west 21 and few more There are many other important archaeological sites in this area in the old river valley to the east of the Ghaggar Plain Among them are Kalibangan Kunal Balu Bhirrana and Banawali 14 Excavations editSee also Phases in archaeology Archaeological chronology dating and Fabric analysis By 2020 only 5 of the site had been excavated by the ASI and Deccan College web 2 Chronology of excavations edit While the earliest excavation of IVC sites started from Harappa in 1921 1922 and Mohenjo daro in 1931 the excavations at Rakhigarhi were first carried out in 1969 followed by more excavations in 1997 98 1998 99 and 1999 2000 between 2011 16 and 2021 onward There are 11 mounds in Rakhigarhi which are named RGR 1 to RGR 11 of which RGR 5 is thickly populated by establishment of Rakhishahpur village and is not available for excavations RGR 1 to RGR 3 RGR6 to RGR9 and some part of RGR 4 are available for excavations web 6 web 8 22 web 7 web 9 In 1963 Archaeological Survey of India ASI began excavations at this site and though little has been published about the excavations 23 24 In 1969 Kurukshetra University s team studied and documented the site led by its Dean of Indic studies Dr Suraj Bhan 25 In 1997 98 1998 99 and 1999 2000 ASI team began to excavate the site again which was led by its director Dr Amrender Nath who published his findings in scholarly journals 25 26 After 2000 excavations were stopped for years because of a CBI investigation on the misuse of funds 27 Much of the findings are donated to the National Museum New Delhi From 2011 to 2016 Deccan College carried out several substantial excavations led by its then Vice Chancellor and archaeologist Dr Vasant Shinde several members of the team published their findings in various academic journals 28 29 From 2021 onward more excavation by ASI commenced Central University of Haryana and Dr Vasant Shinde also expressed interest in commencing excavation web 9 Discoveries edit nbsp The skeleton of a female found at Rakhigarhi and now on display in the National Museum Findings confirm both early and mature Harappan phases and include 4 600 year old human skeletons fortification and bricks web 2 Planned city edit The ASI s detailed excavation of the site revealed the size of the lost city and recovered numerous artefacts some over 5 000 years old Rakhigarhi was occupied at Early Harappan times 8 22 Evidence of paved roads drainage system large rainwater collection storage system terracotta bricks statue production and skilled working of bronze and precious metals have been uncovered citation needed Jewellery including bangles made from terracotta conch shells gold and semi precious stones have also been found 30 Digging so far reveals a well planned city with 1 92 m wide roads a bit wider than in Kalibangan The pottery is similar to Kalibangan and Banawali Pits surrounded by walls have been found which are thought to be for sacrificial or some religious ceremonies There are brick lined drains to handle sewage from the houses Terracotta statues weights bronze artifacts comb copper fish hooks needles and terracotta seals have also been found A bronze vessel has been found which is decorated with gold and silver A gold foundry with about 3000 unpolished semi precious stones has been found Many tools used for polishing these stones and a furnace were found there A burial site has been found with 11 skeletons with their heads in the north direction Near the heads of these skeletons utensils for everyday use were kept The three female skeletons have shell bangles on their left wrists Near one female skeleton a gold armlet has been found In addition semi precious stones have been found lying near the head suggesting that they were part of some sort of necklace Granary edit A granary belonging to mature Harappan phase 2600 BCE to 2000 BCE has been found here Granary is made up of mud bricks with a floor of ramped earth plastered with mud It has 7 rectangular or square chambers Significant traces of lime amp decomposed grass are found on the lower portion of the granary wall indicating that it can also be the storehouse of grains with lime used as insecticide amp grass used to prevent entry of moisture Looking at the size it appears to be a public granary or a private granary of elites 31 Tools edit Hunting tools like copper hafts and fish hooks have been found here Presence of various toys like mini wheels miniature lids sling balls animal figurines indicates a prevalence of toy culture Signs of flourishing trade can be seen by the excavation of stamps jewelry and chert weights Weights found here are similar to weights found at many other IVC sites confirming presence of standardized weight systems 32 Culture clothing and worship edit Fire altars and apsidal structures were revealed in Rakhigarhi web 6 dead link Cotton cloth traces preserved on silver or bronze objects were known from Rakhigarhi Chanhudaro and Harappa 33 An impressive quantify number of stamps seals were also found at this site 8 Cemetery and burial sites edit A cemetery of Mature Harappan period is discovered at Rakhigarhi with eight graves found Often brick covered grave pits had wooden coffin in one case 8 Different type of grave pits were undercut to form an earthen overhang and body was placed below this and then top of grave was filled with bricks to form a roof structure over the grave 9 So far 53 burial sites with 46 skeletons have been discovered Anthropological examination done on 37 skeletons revealed 17 to be of adults 8 to be of subadults while the age of 12 skeletons could not be verified Sex detection of 17 skeletons was successful out of which 7 were male and 10 female skeletons Most of the burials were typical burials with skeletons in a supine position Atypical burials had skeletons in a prone position Some graves are just pits while some are brick lined and contain pottery Some of them also had votive pots with animal remains symbolizing offerings to the dead Bone remains of secondary burials were not charred hence ruling out the possibility of cremation practices While these burials retained many of the Harappan features group burials and prone position burials are distinct Paleo parasitical studies and DNA analysis to determine the lineage is being undertaken 34 35 Parasite eggs which were once existed in the stomach of those buried were found in the burial sites along with human skeletons Analysis of Human aDNA obtained from human bones as well as analysis of parasite and animal DNA will be done to assert origins of these people 36 37 Skeleton finds edit See also Indo Aryan migrations and Indigenous Aryanism In April 2015 four 4 600 year old complete human skeletons were excavated from mound RGR 7 These skeletons belonged to two male adults one female adult classified as I6113 and one child 10 Pottery with grains of food as well as shell bangles were found around these skeletons 38 web 2 nbsp Photo of the skeleton of Rakhigarhi love birds buried together with male 11A facing the woman 11B with their feet pointing south and head towards north 39 Two of the skeletons a man between 35 and 40 years old and women in early 20s who died around the same time They were found buried together side by side with men s head facing the women Their ceremonial burial indicates that they were not in illicit relationship and the lovebirds were likely married to each other Pots found in their grave likely carried food and water as offering to the dead The agate found near he collar bone of the male was likely part of a necklace 40 39 The male was 177 cm 5 ft 9 1 2 in tall and female was 171 cm 5 ft 7 1 2 in Their skeleton had no abnormalities injuries or sign of disease They were both likely quite healthy at the time of their death 41 Shinde et al 2019 have carried out DNA tests on a single skeleton Results announced in September 2018 and a paper published in Cell Magazine in 2019 show that the DNA did not include any traces of steppe ancestry which is in line with the Aryan migration theory which says that Indo Aryans migrated to India from the steppes after the Harappan civilization had started to disintegrate 10 11 web 11 web 12 42 43 44 The DNA of a single male skeleton classified as I4411 shows affinity with present day subaltern South Indian Tamil tribal populations 45 most notably the Irula people 46 A total of 61 skeletons were found till 2016 As the skeletons were excavated scientifically without any contamination archaeologists think that with the help of latest technology on these skeletons and DNA obtained 47 it is possible to determine how Harappans looked like 4500 years ago web 10 The average height is estimated to have been 175 8 cm 5 ft 9 in for men and 166 1 cm 5 ft 5 1 2 in for women 48 Site conservation and development editEndangered heritage site edit In May 2012 the Global Heritage Fund declared Rakhigarhi one of the ten most endangered heritage sites in Asia facing the threat of irreparable loss and destruction due to development pressures insufficient management and looting web 8 49 A 2012 study by the Sunday Times found that the site is not being looked after the iron boundary wall is broken and villagers sell the artefacts they dig out of the site and parts of site are now being encroached by private houses 50 Due to the lack of site protection the site is being destroyed by soil erosion encroachments illegal sand lifting theft of archaeological artifacts for illegal sale It is a punishable crime to sell or buy artifacts found in the ancient sites 80 of mound 6 a residential site of Harappan Era and 7 which is a burial site where 4 human skeletons were recovered in 2015 have been destroyed due to cultivation and soil mining web 8 Site encroachments edit Parts of mounds R4 and R5 have been encroached by the villagers who have built 152 houses web 2 The ASI has only 83 5 acres of the 350 hectare site that entails 11 archaeological mounds due to encroachments and pending court cases for the removal of the encroachments web 2 Site rehabilitation and preservation edit In February 2020 Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced that the site of Rakhigarhi would be developed as an iconic site 51 ASI has commenced the plan to remove encroachments from the site including 152 houses on the R4 and R5 mounds Villages whose houses in the site will be removed will be relocated and rehabilitated in the housing flats on another location web 2 Site museum and lake edit Main article Rakhigarhi Indus Valley Civilisation Museum See also Haryana Rural Antique Museum and Jahaj Kothi Museum Rakhigarhi which is an Indus Valley civilisation site also has a museum developed by the state government 52 There is also Haryana Rural Antique Museum 60 km away which is maintained by CCS HAU in its Gandhi Bhawan exhibits evolution of agriculture and vanishing antiques 53 Jahaj Kothi Museum named after George Thomas is located inside Firoz Shah Palace Complex and maintained by Archaeological Survey of India 54 To develop Rakhigarhi as the global heritage two johad water bodies across the road to museum are developed as lakes The lake has been deepened by digging and traditional ghats with burji on the banks of lake have been constructed A park is developed the spare land of the lake A walking track around the lake with shady trees and fruit trees has been constructed for the tourists 55 The traditional ghats represent the past scenario when paleo Drishadvati river use to flow through Rakhigarhi which had ghats for transporting goods for trade via Lothal port and Dholavira as far as Mesopotamia ancient cities of Elam and Sumer 56 See also edit nbsp India portal Indus Valley civilization related List of Indus Valley Civilization sites Mohenjo daro main site of Indus valley civilization Bhirrana 4 phases of IVC with earliest dated to 8th 7th millennium BCE Kalibanga an IVC town and fort with several phases starting from Early harappan phase Rakhigarhi one of the largest IVC city with 4 phases of IVC with earliest dated to 8th 7th millennium BCE Kunal cultural ancestor of Rehman Dheri List of inventions and discoveries of the Indus Valley Civilization Hydraulic engineering of the Indus Valley Civilization Sanitation of the Indus Valley civilisation Periodisation of the Indus Valley civilisation Pottery in the Indian subcontinent Bara culture subtype of Late Harappan Phase Cemetery H culture 2000 1400 BC early Indo Aryan pottery at IVC sites later evolved into Painted Grey Ware culture of Vedic period Black and red ware belonging to neolithic and Early Harappan phases Sothi Siswal culture subtype of Early Harappan Phase Rakhigarhi Indus Valley Civilisation Museum History of Haryana List of Monuments of National Importance in Haryana List of State Protected Monuments in HaryanaNotes edit a b c Size Allchin amp Erdosy 1995 p 78 Rakhigarhi at 80 hectares is the largest site followed by Banawali at 25 hectares Kenoyer 1998 p 49 Within a few hundred years the thriving town had grown six times larger covering an area of over 150 hectares civilization Mohenjo daro 200 ha Harappa 150 ha Ganweriwala and Rakhigarhi 80 ha and Dholavira 100 ha Possehl 2002 p 72 The site is about 17 meters in height The southern face of the mounds is rather abrupt and steep The northern side slopes down to the surrounding plain The contours of the site have led the excavator to divide up the place into five mounds RGR 1 through 5 RGR 6 a Sothi Siswal site known as Arda was probably a separate settlement I have visited Rakhigarhi and believe that it is 80 hectares in size Heitzman 2008 p 35 They include Mohenjodaro with a city core of about 100 hectares and suburbs possibly covering more than 200 hectares in Sind Harappa more than 150 hectares in the center of Pakistani Punjab Dholavira more than 100 hectares in Gujarat Ganweriwala 82 hectares in Pakistani Punjab near the border with Rajasthan and Rakhigarhi between 80 and 105 hectares in Haryana Wright 2009 p 133 Rakhigarhi was over 100 hectares in size Coningham amp Young 2015 p 183 Quote 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 References edit a b c d Possehl 2002 p 72 a b c Coningham amp Young 2015 p 183 a b c Kenoyer 1998 p 49 a b c Allchin amp Erdosy 1995 p 78 a b c Heitzman 2008 p 35 a b c d e Wright 2009 p 133 a b Garge 2010 p 15 a b c d Possehl 2002 pp 63 71 72 a b McIntosh 2008 p 215 293 a b c d Shinde et al 2019 a b Joseph 2019 McIntosh 2008 p 76 Nath et al 2015 a b Nath Garge amp Law 2014 p 84 Mani 2008 p 237 238 Sarkar et al 2016 p 2 3 Charles Keith Maisels Early Civilizations of the Old World The Formative Histories of Egypt The Levant Mesopotamia India and China Routledge 2003 ISBN 1134837305 Archaeological Survey of India 2004 Excavations at Kunal Haryana PDF Indian Archaeology 1998 99 a Review 11 12 Archived from the original PDF on 8 May 2012 Retrieved 13 July 2012 Garge 2010 pp 15 40 The Harappan Civilisation Its Sub cultures Daily Pioneer 10 May 2018 Kulke Herman 2004 History of India Routledge p 25 ISBN 9780415329200 a b Harappan Surprises Frontline 13 June 2014 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Wright 2009 p 107 Sinopoli Carla M 2015 Ancient South Asian cities in their regions in Norman Yoffee ed The Cambridge World History Cambridge University Press p 325 ISBN 978 0 521 19008 4 Quote Excavations have also occurred at Rakhigarhi but only brief notes have been published and little information is currently available on its form and organization page 325 a b Bhartesh Singh Thakur Former Archaeological Survey director sentenced to jail for fraud Hindustan Times 15 October 2015 Nath Amarendra 31 December 2014 Excavations at Rakhigarhi 1997 98 to 1999 2000 PDF Archaeological Survey of India p 306 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Former Archaeological Survey director sentenced to jail for fraud Hindustan Times 15 October 2015 Retrieved 6 January 2016 Dhiman Kuldip 3 July 2016 Engulfed in the labyrinths of time The Tribune Shinde et al 2012 p 48 Chandigarh Newsline 2 23 2007 Rakhigarhi is the Largest Harappan Site Ever Found Ancient granary found in Haryana The Hindu 2 May 2014 Dig this 5 000 yr old skeletons found in Hisar Hindustan Times 15 April 2015 Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 McIntosh 2008 p 293 333 Mysteries of Rakhigarhi s Harappan Necropolis In burials from 4 000 years ago women both exalted condemned The Indian Express 26 March 2018 Shinde Vasant S Kim Yong Jun Woo Eun Jin Jadhav Nilesh Waghmare Pranjali Yadav Yogesh Munshi Avradeep Chatterjee Malavika Panyam Amrithavalli 21 February 2018 Archaeological and anthropological studies on the Harappan cemetery of Rakhigarhi India PLOS ONE 13 2 e0192299 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1392299S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0192299 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 5821334 PMID 29466426 Scientists to study parasite eggs in Harappan graves The Times of India 12 January 2014 Biomedical Studies on Archaeology 19 February 2014 Dig this 5 000 yr old skeletons found in Hisar Hindustan Times 15 April 2015 Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 a b Vasant Shinde1 et al 2018 A young couple s grave found in the Rakhigarhi cemetery of the Harappan Civilization Anatomy amp Cell Biology vol 51 3 pp 200 204 Ancient lovers found in Indian burial site mystify and intrigue archaeologists CNN January 10 2019 Harappa grave of ancient couple reveals secrets BBC 9 January 2019 Mahalakshmi R October 2019 DNA analysis of Harappan skeleton from Rakhigarhi Thin evidence Frontline Retrieved 7 December 2019 Scientists Part of Studies Supporting Aryan Migration Endorse Party Line Instead The Wire Retrieved 7 December 2019 Das Biplab September 2019 Where did the Indus Valley people come from Nature India doi 10 1038 nindia 2019 121 inactive 31 January 2024 Retrieved 17 April 2020 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Narasimhan V M et al 2019 Supplementary Materials for The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia Science 365 6457 307 308 doi 10 1126 science aat7487 PMC 6822619 PMID 31488661 Narasimhan V M et al 2019 Supplementary Materials for The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia Science 365 6457 209 doi 10 1126 science aat7487 PMC 6822619 PMID 31488661 S2CID 201845485 Why Hindutva is Out of Steppe with new discoveries about the Indus Valley people 6 September 2018 Nath A Walimbe S R Garge T M Mushrif Tripathy V Dehuri R and Malik A 2015 Harappan interments at Rakhigarhi Haryana Man and Environment XL 9 32 Rakhigarhi likely to be developed into a world heritage site India Today 31 March 2013 Retrieved 8 August 2013 Archana Khare Ghose 3 June 2012 Can Rakhigarhi the largest Indus Valley Civilisation site be saved Sunday Times Retrieved 5 June 2012 Rakhigarhi to be developed as iconic site Harappan museum at Rakhigarhi Gazetteer of India Haryana Hisar PDF revenueharyana gov in Government OF Haryana Archived from the original PDF on 1 May 2014 Retrieved 31 May 2016 Jahaj Kothi museum Lake being built in Rakhigarhi english translation of original hindi news च ड गढ क स खन ल क क तर ज पर र ख गढ म बन रह झ ल Dainik Jagran 16 Sept 2021 DNA analysis of Harappan skeleton from Rakhigarhi Thin evidence Frontline October 11 2019 Sources editPrinted sources Allchin F R Erdosy George 1995 The Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia The Emergence of Cities and States Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37695 2 Coningham Robin Young Ruth 2015 The Archaeology of South Asia From the Indus to Asoka c 6500 BCE 200 CE Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84697 4 Garge Tejas 2010 Sothi Siswal Ceramic Assemblage A Reappraisal Ancient Asia 2 doi 10 5334 aa 10203 Heitzman James 2008 The City in South Asia Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 28962 2 Joseph Tony 13 September 2019 New reports clearly confirm Arya migration into India The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 17 April 2020 Kenoyer Jonathan M 1998 Ancient Cities of the Indus Valley Civilization Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 577940 0 Mani B R 2008 Kashmir Neolithic and Early Harappan A Linkage PDF Pragdhara 18 229 247 2008 archived from the original PDF on 18 January 2017 retrieved 17 January 2017 McIntosh Jane R 2008 The ancient Indus Valley new perspectives Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO ISBN 9781576079072 Nath Amarendra Garge Tejas Law Randall 2014 Defining the Economic Space of the Harappan Rakhigarhi An Interface of the Local Subsistance Mechanism and Geological Provenience Studies Puratattva 44 New Delhi Indian Archaeological Society Nath Amarendera 2015 Harrapan interments at Rakhigarhi Man and Environment XL 2 Indian Society for Prehistoric and Quaternary Studies 11 Retrieved 11 May 2016 Possehl Gregory L 2002 The Indus Civilization A Contemporary Perspective Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 0172 2 Sarkar Anindya Mukherjee Arati Deshpande Bera M K Das B Juyal Navin Morthekai P Deshpande R D Shinde V S Rao L S 2016 Oxygen isotope in archaeological bioapatites from India Implications to climate change and decline of Bronze Age Harappan civilization Scientific Reports 6 26555 Bibcode 2016NatSR 626555S doi 10 1038 srep26555 PMC 4879637 PMID 27222033 Shinde Vasant Green Adam Parmar Narender Sable P D 2012 Rakhigarhi and the Harappan Civilization Recent Work and New Challenges Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 72 73 JSTOR 43610687 Shinde Vasant Narasimhan Vagheesh M Rohland Nadin Mallick Swapan Mah Matthew Lipson Mark Nakatsuka Nathan Adamski Nicole Broomandkhoshbacht Nasreen Ferry Matthew Lawson Ann Marie 17 October 2019 An Ancient Harappan Genome Lacks Ancestry from Steppe Pastoralists or Iranian Farmers Cell 179 3 729 735 e10 doi 10 1016 j cell 2019 08 048 ISSN 0092 8674 PMC 6800651 PMID 31495572 Wright Rita P 2009 The Ancient Indus Urbanism Economy and Society Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57219 4 retrieved 29 September 2013 Web sources a b Ahluwalia Disha 6 March 2023 Why are we digging Rakhigarhi a 9th time This Harappan site is a gift that keeps giving The Print Retrieved 12 April 2023 a b c d e f g Damini Nath 2020 At Haryana s Harappan site of Rakhigarhi anxiety trumps history The Hindu Feb 27 2020 Census of India 2011 Rivers in Ambala Markanda River Ambala Tangri River Ambala www ambalaonline in Retrieved 17 April 2020 Chopra Sanjeev 25 September 2010 Overflowing Ghaggar Tangri inundate some villages along Punjab Haryana border The Indian Express Retrieved 9 April 2017 a b c Archaeological Survey of India Indian Archaeology 1997 98 PDF Excavation at Rakhigarhi Archaeological Survey of INdia Retrieved 17 July 2012 a b Subramanian T S 27 March 2014 Rakhigarhi the biggest Harappan site The Hindu a b c d e Deepender Deswal 2015 Rakhigarhi site being plundered due to lack of protection The Tribune India Apr 16 2015 a b c d Deepender Deswal 2018 Harappan site in Hisar draws interest of archaeologists The Tribune India September 18 2021 a b T S Subramanian 2015 Virtual Harappans to come alive The Hindu 3 May 2015 4500 year old DNA from Rakhigarhi reveals evidence that will unsettle Hindutva nationalists India Today Retrieved 21 October 2018 Bal Hartosh Singh What media reporting on ancient DNA results says about our times The Caravan Retrieved 7 December 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rakhigarhi Photo of the Rakhigarhi love birds buried together BBC report with photo of the Rakhigarhi love birds buried together 2015 Man and Environment Journal article on Rakhigarhi burials Haryana Samvad Newsletter Detailed report on Rakhigarhi with color photographs page 1 15 Harappa s greatest centre sheds light on our today The Sunday Guardian 16 September 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rakhigarhi amp oldid 1221764872, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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