Floods in the Indus Valley are often caused by heavy monsoon rains, melting snow, and glacial melt from the Himalayas. Deforestation and human activities like dam construction can exacerbate flooding in the region. Climate change may also be playing a role in increasing the frequency and intensity of floods in the Indus Valley.
The soil in the Indus River valley receives its rich silt from the annual flooding of the river. The Indus River carries sediment and nutrients downstream, depositing them on the surrounding land during floods. This process replenishes the soil and makes it fertile for agriculture.
Some historians suggest that environmental factors such as droughts or floods played a role in the downfall of Indus Valley cities. Others believe that invasions from outside groups, such as the Aryans, could have contributed to the decline of these cities.
The Arabian Sea is the ocean that is near the Indus Valley region in South Asia. The Indus River flows into the Arabian Sea, making it the closest ocean to the ancient Indus Valley civilization.
The Indus Valley civilization existed in what is now modern-day Pakistan. The capital cities of the ancient Indus Valley civilization were Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro.
your mom and your sister
Floods occur when the river flows higher then its regular base. They bring disaster to humans, and fertile soil, making crops grow better.
Tectonic shifts caused a major river, the Sarasvati/Ghaggar river, to dry up. There were also changes in the monsoon rains which caused floods followed by droughts, so that most of the people left.
To help survive during floods .
The floods in the Indus River valley were primarily caused by a combination of heavy monsoon rainfall, melting glaciers from rising temperatures, and inadequate drainage infrastructure. Additionally, human activities such as deforestation and urbanization have exacerbated the situation by increasing runoff and reducing the land's natural absorption capacity. These factors collectively overwhelmed the river system, leading to significant flooding in the region.
There are various opinions as to what happened to the Indus valley civilization. Probably them most held is that climate change (disappearance of the monsoons) resulted in a migration to the east but in smaller more isolated towns.
The advantages of living in the Indus Valley Civilization; there was running water, drainage systems, people could read and write, there was trade with other cultures, there was a government, and domestic animals such as cattle, and crops such as rice and cotton. The disadvantages of living in the Indus Valley Civilization; monsoons caused floods, and in the dry season the people and animals were too hot and hungry and thirsty.
The Aryans (Vedic people) overthrew the stone forts of the Dasyu. If you refer to the Indus Valley Civilization people, no one conquered them, they left Sindh because of floods and drought.
rivers, mountains/hills, floods and maybe climate change
There were monsoon rains that caused floods which damaged houses and other buildings. During the dry season, people and animals went hungry and thirsty, and crops dried up.
It came from Indus valley!! and from the area near indus valley
Indus valley Civilization fell due to natural calamities such as floods, earthquakes etc. some scientists believe that the attack of foreign tribes caused it to fall attack of aryaans ( another civilization ) could be the cause but still it is not found out these are just guesses
The Indus Valley Civilisation grew steadily and prospered for about 1000 years. Around 1500 BCE, the Indus Valley Civilisation rapidly declined. It ended with Mohenjo-Daro being abandoned around 1200BCE and Harappa soon after. Archaeological evidence, such as signs of constant rebuilding of walls and foundation of houses, suggests that floods could have caused the decline of the Indus Valley Civilisation. These woluld also have destroyed the irrigation systems that the people depended on for their farming. Some scholars think that the floods might have bred mosquitoes which led to outbreaks of malaria. Whatever the reason, the decline was almost certainly speeded up by the invasion of the Indus Valley by a group of people called the Aryans\ (Adapted from The Living Past History Of Ancient India,China and Southeastasia 2nd edition)