MOHEN JO DARO WATCH COMPLETE HISTORY OF HARAPPA LATEST SECRET SUCCESS DISCOVERY 2021

Mohenjo-daro, group of mounds and ruins on the right bank of the Indus River, northern Sindh province, southern Pakistan. The Mohen jo Daro is located in Pakistan Province Sindh Near Larkana. The name Mohenjo-daro is reputed to signify “the mound of the dead.” The archaeological importance of the site was first recognized in 1922, one year after the discovery of Harappa. Subsequent excavations revealed that the mounds contain the remains of what was once the largest city of the Indus civilization. Mohenjo-daro was discovered in 1922 by R. D. Banerji, an officer of the Archaeological Survey of India, two years after major excavations had begun at Harappa, some 590 km to the north. Large-scale excavations were carried out at the site under the direction of John Marshall, K. N. Experts think up to 40,000 people may have once lived in Mohenjo Daro. The city was split into two sections. People today call these the citadel and the lower town. The city included a 900 square foot Great Bath and about 700 wells.
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