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| ASI plans to leave the dig exposed, thus creating an on-site museum [Credit: Sandeep Saxena] |
Work here is at a snail’s pace. A group of around 20 sit hunched over what looks like mud to the lay viewer. But to this team of labourers, volunteers and archaeologists, every innocuous piece of stone or tile could be a key to the past. After a hard day’s work, if they are lucky, the archaeologists manage to sift through not more than 50-100 cm of soil. “We can’t dig fast. This excavation is really valuable because with almost every metre we dig, we discover artefacts from different civilisations,” says Vishnu Kant Kulshrestha, assistant superintending archaeologist at the site. “This is probably the only site, which displays a continuous cultural habitation. Right from the Kushans (1st century AD) to the Guptas (4th-5th century AD), to the Rajputs (10th-12th century AD), the Delhi Sultanate (13th century AD) and the Mughals (16th to 19th AD), we have found evidence of all of them here.”
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| A 12th century Vishnu idol [Credit: Sandeep Saxena] |
“In earlier excavations, there were indications that the site was related to the period when the Mahabharata was said to have played out,” said Vasant Swarnkar superintending archaeologist, ASI, Delhi circle. He adds, “And in excavations at other Mahabharata related sites such as Hastinapur, PGWs have been found. To make a connection with the Mahabharata or the city of Indraprastha, stratified deposits of PGWs should be found here too and only further excavation will reveal this.” The archaeologists are confident that they will find PGWs because among other reasons, it has even been discovered that there was a village called Indrapat inside the fort walls, which existed till the early 20th century. The discovery of these PGWs would also mean that civilisation in this region can be dated back to at least 1100 BC.
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| Terracotta figurines from the Rajput period [Credit: Sandeep Saxena] |
The ASI also plans to make this site India’s first open-site museum, which will be on display for the public. “You notice that we are digging at a slope. This is because each layer of history can be seen by people, just the way we found it. Also we want to leave behind the artefacts we find here and create an on-site museum of sorts, so that those interested can come take a look,” says Swarnkar.
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| An artefact from the Sultanate period discovered during excavations [Credit: Sandeep Saxena] |
Author: Sibi Arasu | Source: The Hindu Business Line [March 21, 2014]










