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Excavation of 5,200-Year-Old Harappan Civilization Settlement

Context

Recently, archaeologists from Kerala University unearthed a 5,200-year old Harappan settlement at Padta Bet, around 1.5 km away, near Juna Khatiya, an Early Harappan necropolis, in Kutch district, Gujarat.

A necropolis is a large, designed cemetery with elaborate tomb monuments. The name derives from Ancient Greek, meaning “city of the dead“.

Archaeological excavation reveals 5,200-year-old Harappan Civilization Settlement in Kachchh, Gujarat

Harappan Civilization

  • Archaeobotanical samples too have been collected from the site for further identification of plant exploitation and to understand agricultural practices.
  • Few years ago, archeologists had unearthed a mass burial site with 500 graves on the outskirts of Khatiya village in Gujarat’s Kutch district. 

Crucial Insights of the Recent Excavation On Harappan Settlement 

  • Discovered: Archaeologists discovered the presence of the skeleton, along with pottery artefacts, animal bones, semi-precious stone beads made of carnelian and agate, terracotta spindle whorls, copper, lithic tools, cores and debitage, grinding stones and hammer stones.
Important Discovered Items Significance
  • Pottery Artefacts and the Animal Bones
  • The pottery artefacts and the animal bones are representing cattle, sheep or goat and shell fragments.
  • An Occupation Indicator: It points to possible animal domestication as well as shellfish exploitation.
    • These are an indication of the occupation of the Harappan people.
  • Ceramic Artefacts
  • Unidentified Pottery Tradition: Ceramic artefacts could be from one of the unidentified pottery traditions of the Harappans, involving large storage jars to small bowls and dishes.
    • Different Localities: Within the four-hectare area of Padta Bet, the researchers identified two localities:
      • Locality 1: Artefacts dating back to the Mature Harappan era (2600 BC to 1900 BC) and Late Harappan era (1900 BC to 1700 BC).
      • Locality 2: Artefacts from the Early Harappan era (3,200 BC to 2,600 BC), Mature Harappan era and Late Harappan era.
Given Hypothesis:

  • Demographic Change on Different Localities: The population may have grown in the area, thus spreading out from Locality 2 to Locality 1 or that the inhabitants selected different areas to stay at different points of time.
  • Impact of Unstable Nature: While the habitation site appears to have only a few structures, the researchers said it is possible that much of the structural remains were eroded due to the unstable nature of the landscape.
  • Culture Formation and Evolution: Researchers believe that a network of such small Harappan settlements around the necropolis “might have played a significant role in the cultural formation of Early Harappan and subsequent occupations in this arid area.”
    • Change in Burial Process: While Juna Khatiya was a burial ground from the Early Harappan phase, the skeleton at Padta Bet possibly indicates a change in burial practice over time. 
      • It is an intentional burial and it is possible that the skeletal remains (excavated at Padta Bet) are from the Late Harappan era or there might be a practice to bury within the habitational limits. 
        • There is no burial from the Late Harappan era at Juna Khatiya.
  • Significance: The latest find supports the theory that the graveyard site may have served as a common facility for a cluster of several such smaller settlements.

About the Harappan Civilization

  • It is one of the oldest in the world and has thrived along the banks of river Indus from around 5,000 BC to 1,000 BC. 
  • Classification: While the 2,500-year-long period from 5,000 BC to 2,600 BC is known as the ‘pre-urban’ Harappan phase, between 2,600 BC and 1,900 BC is the ‘urban’ Harappan phase. From there on, the civilisation declines and 1,900 BC to 1,000 BC is considered the ‘post-urban’ Harappan period.

Few Important Harappan Civilization Sites in Kutch, Gujarat

  • Dholavira: It is the UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the biggest metropolises of the Harappan civilisation, is also in Kutch.
    • It is 150 kilometres away from Khatiya that’s among the western-most of the Harappan sites in India. 
    • Given the distance, researchers believe that it is unlikely that people in the urban settlements of Dholavira were buried at the Khatiya site.
  • Desalpar and Khirsara, Kotda Bhadli and Nadapa: These are the other well-known Harappan sites in western Kutch. 
    • But each of them is a site of urban and post-urban periods of the Harappan civilisation and more than 50 km away from Khatiya. 
    • Being a pre-urban Harappan cemetery, there is a possibility that either there was a big settlement in Khatiya or there were smaller settlements around Khatiya and the cemetery was a common burial ground for them.

About Juna Khatiya

  • It is located in Kutch district, Gujarat.
  • It is one of the biggest Harappan burial sites with the possibility of 500 graves.
  • The burials discovered at this site date from 3,200 BCE to 2,600 BCE, predating Dholavira and several other Harappan sites in Gujarat. 
  • Significant Features:
    • The site is important because others like Dholavira have a cemetery in and around the town, but no major habitation has been discovered near Juna Khatiya.
    • The site demonstrates the transition from earth-mound burials to stone graves. 
    • The pottery from the site has features and styles similar to those excavated from early Harappan sites in Sindh and Balochistan.

 

Also Read: Indus Valley Civilization

 

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