Crucially, there isn’t yet a bilingual artifact containing both the Indus Valley script and its translation into another language, as the Rosetta Stone does for ancient Egyptian and ancient Greek.
Archaegological sites and artefacts left behind by the Indus Valley Civilisation ... with the most famous example being the Rosetta Stone, which led to the decipherment of Ancient Egyptian ...
Indus Valley writing used at least 400 picture-signs ... A major find for Mohenjo-Daro was a stone statue – the Priest King. Archaeologists have suggested that he could have been an important ...
Made of semi-precious stones such as carnelian ... differences between the techniques used in Bactria and those seen on ...
The cups have been excavated from the Indus Valley as far back as the end of the Stone Age, 5,000 years ago. They are generally unglazed and unpainted, so the hot liquid seeps into the clay ...
As the Indus Valley Civilisation was part of the Chalcolithic age, i.e., copper, it reflects that the Harappans were not aware of iron. Daya Ram Sahni initiated excavations at Harappa, marking the ...
The Indus Valley civilisation ... The script, found on pottery and stone seals, is composed of short sequences - most containing only four to five symbols. This limited dataset makes deciphering ...
The chief minister of Tamil Nadu, a state in India, announced a prize of $1 million for anyone who can decipher the ancient script of the Indus Valley Civilization. The announcement was made ...
Yajnadevam, aka Bharath Rao, is a rare cryptographer – among epigraphists, archaeologists, linguists etc – who can claim to have cracked the code to deciphering the Indus Valley script.