New research suggests the Indus Valley Civilization was reshaped by centuries of river drought, migration, and climate stress ...
A series of century-scale droughts may have quietly reshaped one of the world’s earliest urban civilizations. New climate ...
Climate simulations suggest that long droughts slowly pushed the Indus Valley Civilization to relocate, reorganize, and ultimately decline.
The Indus Valley Civilization, now referred to as the Sindhu-Saraswati civilization by Indian historians, peaked between 5,000 and 3,500 years ago across modern-day northwest India and Pakistan. Their ...
Research shows the Indus Valley Civilization declined due to repeated century-long droughts that reduced rainfall, strained ...
For more than a century, the ancient Indus script has mystified researchers. Left behind by the Indus Valley civilization, which emerged more than five millennia ago in present-day India and Pakistan, ...
Seals with the signs and symbols of the Indus Valley civilization are waiting to be deciphered. Gary Todd via Wikimedia Commons under CC0 1.0 More than 5,300 years ago, a civilization emerged along ...
Ancient Indus Valley Civilization's decline was driven by prolonged droughts, not sudden catastrophe. New climate studies reveal centuries of drying rivers and water stress forced gradual abandonment ...