Because scientists cannot understand the writing of the people of the Indus Valley, they are unsure about how these people used to live.
Yes - it was a major population centre and today is Pakistan.
No, there has been no historical or fossil evidence of Hippos in the Indus valley.
The Dravidian, Harappa, Mohenjo-Daro and the Aryans.
They did not disappear, they simply left the cities of Sindh, probably due to monsoon flooding and drought. Their descendants still live in Pakistan and North India.
The people who lived in the ancient Indus Valley were the ancestors of modern north Indians and Pakistanis. They were farmers, soldiers, artisans, priests, kings, fishermen, and sailors. They traded with Mesopotamia and Egypt.
Some where in the fertile river valley. ^^Whoever gave that answer sucks.
The Indus Blind dholphin and the sea turtle
because it just is.
The Indus valley civilisation is a far more older and civilisation than the egyptian civilisation. the Egyptians only wanted to live in a society where the king is like their god but the Indus valley civilisation is more like our present day life everybody gets to live a good life not only the king.so I would prefer to live in the Indus valley civilisation than the Egyptian civilisation
yes
History presents no clear facts about the religion of people of the Indus valley civilization. They might have been nature worshipers, or perhaps they followed some Pre-Aryan or Pre-Vedic religion, most probably Jainism (facts relating to Jainism are supported by some of their practices and the seals that have been found there). Fire altars were found at one Indus site, and figures similar to Skanda and Shiva, Hindu deities, have been found on some Indus seals.