LEADER 08815nam0 22013691i 450 001 UON00010450 005 20231205101931.205 010 $a81-204-0779-2 100 $a20020107d1993 |0itac50 ba 101 $aeng 102 $aIN 105 $a|||| 1|||| 200 1 $aHarappan civilization$eA recent perspective$fed. by Gregory L. Possehl 205 $a2nd rev. ed 210 $aNew Delhi$cAmerican Inst. of Indian Studies$d1993 215 $aXV, 595 p.$ctav. ill.$d28 cm 311 $a107-113 p.$9UON00010506 311 $a295-320 p.$9UON00010535 311 $a287-294 p.$9UON00010534 311 $a421-426 p.$9UON00010550 311 $a381-384 p.$9UON00010543 311 $a427-444 p.$9UON00010552 311 $a223-232 p.$9UON00010527 311 $a79-84 p.$9UON00010498 311 $a113-124 p.$9UON00010513 311 $a457-467 p.$9UON00010556 311 $a205-222 p.$9UON00010526 311 $a245-260 p.$9UON00010530 311 $a125-134 p.$9UON00010510 311 $a469-520 p.$9UON00010559 311 $a15-28 p.$9UON00010492 311 $a31-40 p.$9UON00010493 311 $a365-377$9UON00010541 311 $a3-14 p.$9UON00010490 311 $a141-167 p.$9UON00010516 311 $a41-50 p.$9UON00010494 311 $a135-140 p.$9UON00010511 311 $a555-568 p.$9UON00010564 311 $a445-454 p.$9UON00010555 311 $a197-201$9UON00010524 311 $a271-286$9UON00010533 311 $a175-184 p.$9UON00010520 311 $a399-412 p.$9UON00010547 311 $a335-364 p.$9UON00010540 311 $a51-60 p.$9UON00010495 311 $a385-394 p.$9UON00010544 311 $a521-554 p.$9UON00010562 311 $a261-264 p.$9UON00010531 311 $a265-270$9UON00010532 311 $a185-195 p.$9UON00010521 311 $a97-106 p.$9UON00010502 311 $a69-78 p.$9UON00010497 311 $a413-420 p.$9UON00010549 311 $a239-244$9UON00010529 311 $a571-581 p.$9UON00010565 311 $a85-96 p.$9UON00010500 311 $a167-174 p.$9UON00010517 311 $a233-238 p.$9UON00010528 311 $a61-68 p.$9UON00010496 311 $a323-335$9UON00010537 311 $a395-398 p,$9UON00010545 464 0$1001UON00010506$12001 $aAllahdino$ean excavation of a small Harappan site$fWalter A. Fairservis jr.$v107-113 p. 464 0$1001UON00010535$12001 $aAnimal domestication in the Middle East: a revised view from the Eastern margin$fRichard H. Meadow$v295-320 p. 464 0$1001UON00010534$12001 $aChanges in plant use at Rojdi: Implication for early South Asian subsistence systems$fSteven A. Weber$v287-294 p. 464 0$1001UON00010550$12001 $aDaimabad Bronzes$fM.K. Dhavalikar$v421-426 p. 464 0$1001UON00010543$12001 $aDeurbanization of the Harappa Civilization$fA. Ghosh$v381-384 p. 464 0$1001UON00010552$12001 $aDid the Maya collapse? A new world perspective on the demise of the Harappan civilization$fRobert Sharker$v427-444 p. 464 0$1001UON00010527$12001 $aEcological factors and the Harappan civilization$fD.P. Agrawal$v223-232 p. 464 0$1001UON00010498$12001 $aExcavation at Mehrgarh: their significance for understanding the background of the Harappan civilization$fJean F. Jarrige$v79-84 p. 464 0$1001UON00010513$12001 $aExcavations at Banawali (1974-77)$fR.S. Bisht$v113-124 p. 464 0$1001UON00010556$12001 $aExcavations at Ghazi Shah, Sindh, Pakistan$fLouis Flam$v457-467 p. 464 0$1001UON00010526$12001 $aFood economy of the Harappans$fVishnu-Mittre and R. Savithri$v205-222 p. 464 0$1001UON00010530$12001 $aFrom Jhelum to Yamuna: City and settlement in the second and third millennium B.C. / Marcia Fentress$v245-260 p. 464 0$1001UON00010510$12001 $aGaneshwar-Jodhapura Culture$eNew traits in Indian Archaeology$fR.C. Agrawala and Vijai Kumar$v125-134 p. 464 0$1001UON00010559$12001 $aˆThe ‰Harappa project 1986-1989: New investigations at an ancient Indus city$fGeorge F. Dales and J. Mark Kenoyer Con vari contributi$v469-520 p. 464 0$1001UON00010492$12001 $aˆThe ‰Harappan Civilisation$ea contemporary perspective$fG.L. Possehl$v15-28 p. 464 0$1001UON00010493$12001 $aˆThe ‰Harappan civilization and the need for a new approach$fVishnu-Mittre$v31-40 p. 464 0$1001UON00010541$12001 $aHarappan Civilization beyond the Indian Subcontinent$fMaurizio Tosi$v365-377 464 0$1001UON00010490$12001 $aˆThe ‰Harappan Civilization: Some reflections on its environments and resources and their exploitation$fB.K. Thapar$v3-14 p. 464 0$1001UON00010516$12001 $aHarappan complex on the Sutlej (India)$fY.D. Sharma$v141-167 p. 464 0$1001UON00010494$12001 $aHarappan culture$ea reconsideration$fJim G. Shaffer$v41-50 p. 464 0$1001UON00010511$12001 $aHarappan fallout (?) in the Mid-Gangetic Valley$fB.P. Sinha$v135-140 p. 464 0$1001UON00010564$12001 $aHarappan in Saurashtra: the mercantile enterprise as seen from recent excavation of Kuntasi$fM.K. Dhavalikar$v555-568 p. 464 0$1001UON00010555$12001 $aˆThe ‰Harappan legacy: Break and continuity$fD.P. Agrawal$v445-454 p. 464 0$1001UON00010524$12001 $aHarappan settlements in the Kutch-Saurashtra Region: Pattern of distribution and routes of communication$fY.M. Chitalwala$v197-201 464 0$1001UON00010533$12001 $aHarappan trade in metals and minerals: A regional approach$fShashi Asthana$v271-286 464 0$1001UON00010520$12001 $aˆThe ‰Harappans of Daimabad$fS.A. Sali$v175-184 p. 464 0$1001UON00010547$12001 $aHulas and the late Harappan complex in Western Uttar Pradesh$fK.N. Dikshit$v399-412 p. 464 0$1001UON00010540$12001 $aIndus-Arabians interaction during the Bronze Age: A review of evidence$fChristopher Edens$v335-364 p. 464 0$1001UON00010495$12001 $aˆThe ‰Late Harappan$eA study in cultural dynamics$fS.P. Gupta$v51-60 p. 464 0$1001UON00010544$12001 $aˆThe ‰Legacy of the Indus Civilization$fF.R. Allchin$v385-394 p. 464 0$1001UON00010562$12001 $aLewan - A stone tool factory of the fourth to third millennium B.C. / Bridget and Robert Allchin$v521-554 p. 464 0$1001UON00010531$12001 $aˆThe ‰Location of Harappa$fShereen Ratnagar$v261-264 p. 464 0$1001UON00010532$12001 $aˆ"‰Long Barrel-Cylinder" Beads and the issue of Pre-Sargonic contacts between the Harappan civilization and Mesopotamia$fDilip K. Chakrabarti$v265-270 464 0$1001UON00010521$12001 $aManda$eA Harappan site in Jammu and Kashmir$fJagat P. Joshi annd Madhu Bala$v185-195 p. 464 0$1001UON00010502$12001 $aMohenjodaro miscellany: some unpublished, forgotten, or misinterpreted features$fGeorge F. Dales$v97-106 p. 464 0$1001UON00010497$12001 $aMotivation for early indian urbanization$ean examination$fK.V. Soundara Rajan$v69-78 p. 464 0$1001UON00010549$12001 $aNew lights in the post-urban (late Harappan) phase of the Indus civilization in India$fS.R. Rao$v413-420 p. 464 0$1001UON00010529$12001 $aOn the composition and technology of Harappan microbeads$fK.T.M. Hedge, R.V. Karanthi and S.P. Sychanthavong$v239-244 464 0$1001UON00010565$12001 $aParadigm changes in the study of the Indus civilization$fRobert H. Dyson, jr.$v571-581 p. 464 0$1001UON00010500$12001 $aRecent archaeological research in the Cholistan desert$fM. Rafiique Mughal$v85-96 p. 464 0$1001UON00010517$12001 $aSome rural Harappan settlements in Gujarat$fR.N. Metha$v167-174 p. 464 0$1001UON00010528$12001 $aSubstitute stones$fBridget Allchin$v233-238 p. 464 0$1001UON00010496$12001 $aSumer, Elam and the Indus$eThree urban processes equal one structure$fC.C. Lamberg-Karlowsky$v61-68 p. 464 0$1001UON00010537$12001 $aTell Abraq and the Harappan tradition in Southeastern Arabia$fDaniel T. Potts$v323-335 464 0$1001UON00010545$12001 $aWest was West and East was East, but when and how did the twain meet? The role of Bhagwanpura as a bridge between certain stages of the Indus and Ganges Civilization$fB.B. Lal$v395-398 p, 606 $aHARAPPA (PAKISTAN)$xCULTURA E CIVILTA'$3UONC002756$2FI 620 $aIN$dNew Delhi$3UONL000110 686 $aSI X C$cSUBCONT. INDIANO - ARCHEOLOGIA - SITI$2A 702 1$aPOSSEHL$bGregory L.$3UONV000791 712 $aAmerican Institute of Indian Studies$3UONV247061$4650 801 $aIT$bSOL$c20240220$gRICA 899 $aSIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEO$2UONSI 912 $aUON00010450 950 $aSIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEO$dSI SI X C 025 BIS $eSI SA 75414 7 025 BIS 996 $aHarappan civilization$91178349 997 $aUNIOR