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81 results for "Indus Valley" — page 1 of 5
ZG_5_21 — Indus Valley Script: The Undeciphered Writing System
The Indus Valley Script (also called the Harappan script) remains one of the last major undeciphered writing systems from the ancient world. [KEY FINDING] Used by the Indus Valley Civilization (c. 2600–1900 BCE) — one of
W_1_03 — Harappan / Indus Valley Civilization — Mohenjo-daro, Undeciphered Script, and the Pashupati Seal
The Indus Valley / Harappan Civilization (c. 3300–1300 BCE, mature phase 2600–1900 BCE) was the largest of the three great Bronze Age civilizations — at its peak covering ~1.25 million km², with an estimated population o
D_3_23 — Mohenjo-Daro: Unsolved Mysteries of the Indus Metropolis
Mohenjo-Daro (Sindhi: "Mound of the Dead") — located in the Larkana District of Sindh, Pakistan, on the right bank of the Indus River — was one of the two largest cities (alongside Harappa, ~600 km to the north) of the I
W_1_25 — Dilmun: Sacred Land of the Persian Gulf
Dilmun (Sumerian: NI.TUK.KI; also spelled Telmun) was an ancient civilization and trading polity centered on present-day Bahrain, with extensions to Failaka Island (Kuwait), the eastern Arabian coastal region, and possib
D_3_09 — Mohenjo-daro and Harappan Urban Planning
Mohenjo-daro ("Mound of the Dead" in Sindhi) — located in present-day Sindh province, Pakistan — is the largest and best-preserved urban center of the Indus Valley Civilization (IVC), one of the three great Bronze Age ci
F_1_21 — Harappan Maritime Trade: The Meluhha-Dilmun-Magan Network
The Indus Valley (Harappan) civilization (~3300–1300 BCE) operated one of the Bronze Age's most extensive maritime trade networks, connecting the Indian subcontinent to Mesopotamia across the Persian Gulf via the interme
F_1_18 — Harappan Maritime Trade Networks
The Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilization (c. 3300–1300 BCE) operated one of the Bronze Age's most extensive maritime trade networks, connecting the Indus coast to Mesopotamia via intermediate ports in the Persian Gulf re
M_4_07 — Ancient Nuclear War Theory — Mohenjo-daro and the Mahabharata
The ancient nuclear war theory proposes that advanced civilizations possessed nuclear or comparable weapons of mass destruction thousands of years ago, citing the Mahabharata's descriptions of devastating "brahmastra" we
W_5_10 — Tamil Sangam Civilization and Dravidian Heritage
The Sangam period (c. 3rd century BCE – 3rd century CE, with literary traditions extending to ~5th century CE) represents the earliest extensively documented phase of Tamil civilization in southern India — a cultural, li
E_2_07 — The 4.2 Kiloyear Event — Bronze Age Climate Catastrophe
The 4.2 kiloyear event (~2200 BCE) was a severe, century-scale aridification episode that constitutes one of the most significant abrupt climate changes of the Holocene. Identified through speleothem, marine sediment, an
J_3_13 — Ancient Plumbing and Sanitation: Urban Water Systems
The management of clean water supply, wastewater removal, and human waste sanitation in ancient cities represents one of the most important — and most often underappreciated — technological achievements of the pre-modern
J_5_06 — Ancient Measurement Standards and Metrology
Standardized measurement — of length, weight, volume, area, and angle — was fundamental to ancient engineering, trade, taxation, land surveying, and astronomical observation. Every major civilization developed metrologic
ZC_3_22 — Fourth Industrial Revolution
The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) is a framework articulated by Klaus Schwab (founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum) in his 2016 book The Fourth Industrial Revolution, describing a new phase of
O_2_12 — Great Rift Valley: Continental Splitting and Hominid Cradle
The East African Rift System (EARS) — commonly called the Great Rift Valley — is one of Earth's most geologically dramatic and scientifically significant features: an active continental rift zone stretching approximately
O_5_11 — Antarctic Anomalies: Dry Valleys, Blood Falls, and Sub-Ice Geology
Antarctica — the coldest, driest, highest, and windiest continent — harbors an extraordinary array of geological, chemical, and biological anomalies that challenge common assumptions about what constitutes an "uninhabita
D_1_25 — Ollantaytambo: Megalithic Engineering in the Sacred Valley
Ollantaytambo (Quechua: Ullantaytampu) is a monumental Inca archaeological site at 2,792 m elevation in the Sacred Valley (Urubamba Valley) of Peru, approximately 72 km northwest of Cusco. It served simultaneously as a r
B_2_21 — Unicorn: Horse-Horn Mythology and Cultural Persistence
The unicorn — a single-horned equine creature of extraordinary beauty and power — is one of the most enduring mythological figures in world culture, with a documented textual tradition spanning at least 2,400 years and p
L_2_06 — South Asian Genetics and Population History
South Asia harbors one of the most genetically diverse and internally structured population histories of any world region, reflecting deep settlement, repeated admixture, and long periods of extreme endogamy. The best-su
H_4_29 — Food Industry Science Suppression
The systematic influence of the food industry on nutrition science, dietary guidelines, and public health policy represents one of the most extensively documented cases of corporate science suppression in the modern era
H_4_28 — Corporate Knowledge Suppression: Industry Strategies for Concealing Scientific Evidence
Corporate knowledge suppression — the deliberate concealment, distortion, or delayed disclosure of scientific findings by private industry to protect commercial interests — represents one of the most consequential forms
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