Dairy Production in Indus Valley Civilisation | 02 Nov 2020
Why in News
Recently, a study by Indian and Canadian archaeologists has found that dairy products were being produced by the Harappans as far back as 2500 BCE. The finding reveals the earliest evidence of dairy production.
- The year 2020 also marks 100 years of discovery of Indus Valley Civilisation.
Key Points
- Milk Production:
- The results of the study are based on molecular chemical analysis of residue in shards of pottery found at the archaeological site of Kotada Bhadli, in Gujarat.
- Traces seen in cooking vessels indicate the presence of milk, which may have been boiled for consumption. There are also remains of a perforated vessel, which indicates processing of milk into different forms.
- Pots are porous and absorb liquid from food. This helps the pots to preserve the molecules of food such as fats and proteins.
- Using techniques like C16 and C18 analysis the source of foods can be identified.
- The large herd indicates that milk was produced in surplus so that it could be exchanged and there could have been some kind of trade between settlements.
- This could have also given rise to an industrial level of dairy production.
- Types of Animals:
- Through a process called stable isotope analysis, the researchers were also able to identify that cattles used for dairy production.
- Most of the cattle and water-buffalo died at an older age, suggesting they could have been raised for milk, whereas the majority of goat/sheep died when they were young, indicating they could have been used for meat.
- Through a process called stable isotope analysis, the researchers were also able to identify that cattles used for dairy production.
- Faceless Civilisation:
- The Indus Valley Civilisation was faceless — no king, no bureaucratic organisations, but there were very close regional interactions between settlements, a symbiotic relationship of give and take that helped the civilisation survive for so long.
- Background:
- Indus Valley Civilisation is known for its metropolitan cities and the big towns, great urban planning, trading systems, jewellery making.
- Earlier, there was no idea how the common people were living during the Harappan times, and how they were contributing to the larger network.
- However, the new study throws fresh light on the rural economy of the Indus Valley Civilisation.
Indus Valley Civilization
- The history of India begins with the birth of the Indus Valley Civilization (IVC), also known as Harappan Civilization.
- It flourished around 2,500 BC, in the western part of South Asia, in contemporary Pakistan and Western India.
- The Indus Valley was home to the largest of the four ancient urban civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, India and China.
- In the 1920s, the Archaeological Department of India carried out excavations in the Indus valley wherein the ruins of the two old cities, viz. Mohenjodaro and Harappa were unearthed.
- In 1924, John Marshall, Director-General of the ASI, announced the discovery of a new civilisation in the Indus valley to the world.
Important Sites of IVC | |||
Site | Excavated by | Location | Important Findings |
Harappa | Daya Ram Sahni in 1921 | Bank of river Ravi in Montgomery district of Punjab (Pakistan) |
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Mohenjo-Daro (Mound of Dead) | R.D. Banerjee in 1922 | Bank of river Indus in Larkana district of Punjab (Pakistan) |
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Sutkagendor | Stein in 1929 | In southwestern Balochistan province, Pakistan on Dast river |
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Chanhudaro | N.G. Majumdar in 1931 | Sindh on the Indus river |
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Amri | N.G. Majumdar in 1935 | On the bank of Indus river |
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Kalibangan | Ghose in 1953 | Rajasthan on the bank of Ghaggar river |
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Lothal | R. Rao in 1953 | Gujarat on Bhogva river near Gulf of Cambay |
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Surkotada | J.P. Joshi in 1964 | Gujarat |
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Banawali | R.S. Bisht in 1974 | Hisar district of Haryana |
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Dholavira | R.S Bisht in 1985 | Gujarat in Rann of Kachchh |
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