Scientists may have solved why this ancient, advanced civilization vanished [View all]
Climate data offers clues to what might have happened to people of the Indus River Valley and how that might relate to our own warming world.
At its peak, the ancient Indus River Valley civilization featured gridded streets, multistory brick homes, flush toilets and bustling shops. Its people traded gold, precious stones and items such as bronze carts along the regions waterways. Others carved detailed human figurines and molded clay toys. They grew wheat, barley and cotton, and crafted tools to bring water for crops from nearby rivers.
The valley, largely located in modern-day Pakistan and northwest India, hosted one of the most advanced societies at the time, along with Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt. And then with little signs of fighting or power struggles it mysteriously disappeared.
Todays scientists have been trying to explain the puzzling downfall of Harappa, one of the valleys largest cities, by looking at the environmental conditions. In a study published Thursday in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, an international team used paleoclimate data and computer models to re-create the climate during the civilizations existence between 3000 and 1000 B.C. They found four intense droughts reduced rainfall and dried up waterways and soils, which probably caused Harappan residents to relocate frequently.
The most surprising finding is that the Harappan decline was driven not by a single catastrophic event, but by repeated, long, and intensifying river droughts lasting centuries, said Hiren Solanki, lead author at the Indian Institute of Technology at Gandhinagar, India.
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