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What is the Indus River Valley Civilization best known for?

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What is the Indus River Valley Civilization best known for?​

Overview The Indus River Valley Civilization, 3300-1300 BCE, also known as the Harappan Civilization, extended from modern-day northeast Afghanistan to Pakistan and northwest India. Important innovations of this civilization include standardized weights and measures, seal carving, and metallurgy with copper, bronze, lead, and tin.
How many times is the Indus River mentioned in Rigveda?
Extent and major sites of the Indus Valley Civilisation 3000 BC. The Rigveda describes several rivers, including one named “Sindhu”. The Rigvedic “Sindhu” is thought to be the present-day Indus river. It is attested 176 times in its text, 94 times in the plural, and most often used in the generic sense of “river”.
Is the Indus Valley Civilization related to the Dravidian language family?
A relationship with the Dravidian or Elamo-Dravidian language family is favoured by a section of scholars. The Indus Valley Civilisation is named after the Indus river system in whose alluvial plains the early sites of the civilisation were identified and excavated.

What animals live in the Indus Valley?​

Some of animals living in the Indus valley were domesticated while others were wild. The remains of humped bull, buffalo, sheep, elephant, pig and camel have been found. Dogs, cats were also domesticated. Formerly, it was believed that the Indus people did not tame horses as domestic animals.

What is the difference between Indus Valley and Punjab?
The northern part of the Indus Valley, with its tributaries, forms the Punjab region, while the lower course of the river is known as Sindh and ends in a large delta.

What is the confluence of the Indus and Zanskar rivers?
Confluence of Indus and Zanskar rivers. The Indus is at the left of the picture, flowing left-to-right; the Zanskar, carrying more water, comes in from the top of the picture. The Indus river feeds the Indus submarine fan, which is the second largest sediment body on the Earth.

The Indus Valley is located at the eastern end of the rains that watered the Mediterranean and the Middle East and at the western end of the Indian monsoon. The population, therefore, lived precisely where these two climatic systems meet.
 
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