8000-year-old Indus Valley Civilization could be

older than the first Egyptian pharaohs

 Feb 14, 2026,

The research suggests the Indus Valley Civilization could be far

older than previously believed, not just by a few centuries, but by

thousands of years. Experts studying pottery and animal remains

at *Bhirrana in northern India say* the roots of this ancient society

may stretch back around 8,000 years. If confirmed, that would

place its earliest beginnings well before the era of Egypt’s first

pharaohs. (KR:  >10000 years that means Rig vedam must be older than this
tending to 12 to 13000 years)

For decades, school textbooks have placed the great civilizations

of the ancient world in an order from first Mesopotamia, then

Egypt with its pyramids and pharaohs. And alongside them, the

Indus Valley Civilization. This timeline study may now be shifting,

as the research suggests.

Indus Valley Civilization may be thousands of years older than believed

The Indus Valley Civilisation, also known as the Harappan civilization,
flourished roughly between 2600 and 1900 BC. At its height, it covered vast
areas of what is now Pakistan and north-west India. It has long been
recognized as one of the world’s earliest urban cultures.

Fresh carbon dating at Bhirrana, however, is pushing that timeline further
back. Researchers from the Archaeological Survey of India and collaborating
institutions analysed pottery fragments and animal bones from deep
settlement layers. Radiocarbon results suggest occupation dating back
nearly 9,000 years before present.

The findings, published in Scientific Reports, indicate that organised
communities in the region may have formed far earlier than previously
assumed.

Sites such as Mohenjo-daro and Harappa reveal carefully planned streets
laid out in grid patterns. Many homes had access to wells, courtyards, and
bathing areas. Covered drainage systems ran beneath the streets, forming
what experts often describe as one of the earliest known examples of urban
sanitation anywhere in the world.

Some houses appear to have had two storeys, while large granaries,
marketplaces, and dockyards suggest complex economic organisation.
Interestingly, archaeologists have not uncovered grand temples or obvious
royal palaces on the scale seen in Egypt. This absence may indicate a
different form of governance possibly less centralised although many
questions remain unanswered.

How large the Indus Valley Civilisation became

At its peak, the Indus civilisation may have supported more than five
million people, representing a significant share of the world’s population
at the time. Its territory stretched from the Arabian Sea towards the
Ganges basin,forming one of the largest cultural zones of the ancient world.

Archaeologists have uncovered finely drilled gemstone beads, standardised
stone weights, metal tools made from copper and bronze, and intricately
carved seals bearing a script that remains undeciphered. Despite decades of
study, the writing system of the Indus Valley continues to puzzle
researchers.

Why the Indus Valley Civilisation declined

For many years, scholars pointed to climate change as a key factor in the
civilisation’s decline. The weakening of monsoon patterns and the drying of
river systems may have disrupted agriculture and trade. However, the
recent  findings from Bhirrana suggest a more gradual transition rather
than a sudden collapse. Evidence indicates  communities adapted to shifting
environmental conditions by changing crops, moving from water-intensive

wheat and barley to more drought-resistant varieties such as millets and
rice. This shift may have reduced the need for large centralised storage
facilities and dense urban centres.

Instead of a dramatic downfall, the civilisation may have slowly dispersed
into smaller settlements over time. Other theories, including migration,
flooding, disease or social change, are still debated

K Rajaram IRS  15226

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