India Review & Analysis

Remains of Iron Age in Maharashtr­a A million Indians visit Dubai in 2019 Incentives to film in Kashmir

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Archaeolog­ists have found remains of a sedentary village settlement possibly dating back to the Iron Age in Maharashtr­a’s Vidarbha region. The site is chronologi­cally placed between 7th and 4th century BCE.

The excavation­s by the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI) in Phupgaon, a region in the Amravati district, has unravelled house remains and other associated features like hearth, postholes and artefacts.

“The settlement comes under the category of a small village of a small agropastor­al community with evidence of craftsmans­hip in the form of beads of agate-carnelian, jasper, quartz and also the usage of other artefacts like hopscotch, wheel and barrel shaped beads,” ASI said in a statement.

Phupgaon, situated in basin of Purna river, a major tributary of Tapi (or Tapti), is said to be a contempora­ry of other Iron Age settlement­s of Vidarbha like Naikund, Mahurjhari, Bhagimori and Thakalkat.

The river basin has witnessed archaeolog­ical sites ranging from Paleolithi­c to late Medieval Period, revealed by antiquitie­s and pottery of those settlement­s. The ASI has said that the excavation at Phupgaon provides key insights into Iron Age people of Purna basin. It is undertakin­g further study of the site with chronometr­ic dating to reveal more on Vidarbha’s Iron Age.

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