sulait
Most of them were made of wood or mudbricks, like the Mesopotamians.
That is a great question, although, he did not. He invaded Western India. If those are synnonyms, get a job.
They are used for trade . They are made of terra cotta and have writting and an animal on them . Most seals may have been used to close jars filled with a trade good such as oil. Other seals may contain the text of important myths.
I've heard that the evidence is bones from excavations, which show that nobody starved. This means that they shared the food equally. Another evidence is that the (quiet expensive and difficult-to-produce) bronze was common among the people in the Indus. In Nile Valley and Mesopotamia it was considered luxury to have things made of bronze, but in Indus Valley everybody had it.
some of the technology made during the Indus river valley was irrigation systems, and weighing equipment
jhj
No.
sulait
the indus river made an agriculture and trade based economy possible
They believed they were made of puke amd fungus.
not to much is known, but it could have made up some of the population, mostly, it was made up of polythiesm (i think it is spelled that way), the indus valley statues show that it could have had hinduism, but the Indus valley's religion is a mystery.
Thanks to the Indus Valley's hot climate, crops grew quickly. Archaeologists believe that this made it possible for farmers to plant and harvest twice a year. 😃
Some Indus artifacts, such as stamp seals, had writing on them. Many were made of ceramic, which stone age cultures did not use. Other Indus artifacts, such as tools and weapons and ornaments, were made of bronze, copper, silver or gold.
Some Indus artifacts, such as stamp seals, had writing on them. Many were made of ceramic, which stone age cultures did not use. Other Indus artifacts, such as tools and weapons and ornaments, were made of bronze, copper, silver or gold.
The Indus River made an agricultural and trade-based economy possible.
Sandals made of cloth and wood or bare footed