The transformation of the Indus civilization

被引:1
|
作者
Possehl G.L. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] University of Pennsylvania Museum, Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
[2] Department of Anthropology, 325 University of Pennsylvania Museum, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
关键词
Archaeology; Deurbanization; Eclipse; Harappan Civilization; Indus Civilization; South Asia; Urbanization;
D O I
10.1007/BF02220556
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Suggested explanations for the "eclipse" of the Indus Civilization (2500-1900 B.C.) are reviewed, along with a description of the culture history that accompanies the abandonment of Mohenjo-daro and many other Mature Harappan settlements. New data are presented from Mohenjo-daro which suggest that the process of change that brought about the eventual abandonment of the site began in the later part of the third millennium B.C. Settlement data from the ancient Sarasvati River, Gujarat, and northwestern India suggest that there was no general "eclipse" but a process of deurbanization and a shift eastward in the general distribution of the population. © 1997 Plenum Publishing Corporation.
引用
收藏
页码:425 / 472
页数:47
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The transformation of the Indus civilization (Cultural history, deurbanization, third-millennium-BC)
    Possehl, GL
    JOURNAL OF WORLD PREHISTORY, 1997, 11 (04) : 425 - 472
  • [2] Killing the Priest-King: Addressing Egalitarianism in the Indus Civilization
    Green, Adam S.
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2021, 29 (02) : 153 - 202
  • [3] Pastoralism, climate change, and the transformation of the Indus Civilization in Gujarat: Faunal analyses and biogenic isotopes
    Chase, Brad
    Meiggs, David
    Ajithprasad, P.
    JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY, 2020, 59
  • [4] The vanishing millets of the Indus civilization
    Steve Weber
    Arunima Kashyap
    Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 2016, 8 : 9 - 15
  • [5] The vanishing millets of the Indus civilization
    Weber, Steve
    Kashyap, Arunima
    ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2016, 8 (01) : 9 - 15
  • [6] Climate variability and evolution of the Indus civilization
    Dutt, Som
    Gupta, Anil K.
    Singh, Manjeet
    Jaglan, Sonu
    Saravanan, P.
    Balachandiran, P.
    Singh, Amar
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2019, 507 : 15 - 23
  • [7] Killing the Priest-King: Addressing Egalitarianism in the Indus Civilization
    Adam S. Green
    Journal of Archaeological Research, 2021, 29 : 153 - 202
  • [8] Materializing Harappan identities: Unity and diversity in the borderlands of the Indus Civilization
    Chase, Brad
    Ajithprasad, P.
    Rajesh, S. V.
    Patel, Ambika
    Sharma, Bhanu
    JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY, 2014, 35 : 63 - 78
  • [9] Landscapes of Urbanization and De-Urbanization: A Large-Scale Approach to Investigating the Indus Civilization's Settlement Distributions in Northwest India
    Green, Adam S.
    Petrie, Cameron A.
    JOURNAL OF FIELD ARCHAEOLOGY, 2018, 43 (04) : 284 - 299
  • [10] Does size matter: the role and significance of cereal grains in the Indus civilization
    Weber, Steve
    Kashyap, Arunima
    Harriman, David
    ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2010, 2 (01) : 35 - 43