Indus Valley

Indus Valley Civilizations

For over 5,000 years, archaeologists have been puzzled over the tiny inscriptions on seals in the Indus Valley, with no known Rosetta Stone to guide them.

Now, quantum-driven pattern recognition, cryptography, code, computation, and machine learning are revealing startling insights into symbol structure, writing direction, and regional dialects.

Quantum AI has finally solved the mystery of the Indus Valley Script, and these shocking revelations will transform the archaeological world, and our understanding of the ancient human world, forever.

Over 1.000 cities, with agriculture and industry were spread out along the river in an area larger than France. Its people travelled by boat through the Arabian Gulf to Mesopotamia.

Dholavira, Indus Valley sign board:

Dholavira is a well-preserved, major archaeological site of the Indus Valley Civilization, under 8m deep sediment, renowned for its sophisticated water conservation and management system, including 250K m³ of precious water in 7m deep reservoirs, dams, and channels, besides elaborate sewer and street cleaning systems next to residences.

It is also known for its advanced urban planning with distinct sections, unique architecture using sandstone + limestone.

Mohenjo-daro built c.2500 BCE, and was one of the largest settlements and one of the world’s earliest major cities in the Indus Valley. The people used unfired bricks for walls and fired bricks for foundations. Some city walls were 15m high.

Despite their achievements, they disappeared without leaving decipherable records. Archaeologists found artifacts like seals, signs, and scripts, but remain puzzled by their true meaning:

   
Over 400 different seals and signs with magical writings.


River boat engraved in stone