The villagers of Kanmer skillfully work along with their instructors at the Kanmer Excavation site in the Kutch district of Gujarat state some 275 kms from Ahmedabad on February 24, 2008. According to the Director of Gujarat State Department of Archaeology Y S Rawat, a fort wall of stones - around 17 metres in width from a small site of the Indus Valley Civilisation is visible. According to Jeevan Singh Kharakwal, Associate Professor - Department of Archaeology -Institute of Rajasthan Studies, the deposits of 5 different civilisations - Early Harappan period - Matured Harappan Period - Late Harappan Period - Historic Harappan Period and the Medieval Harappan Period are visible. The Kanmer Archaeological Research Project, which includes the Japanese Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, started in April 2006 and will continue until March 2011.
Indian Associate Professor Jeevan Singh Kharakwal from the Department of Archaeology, Institute of Rajasthan Studies (L) and Japanese Professor Toshiki Osada from the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature of Japan interact at the Kanmer Excavation site in the Kutch district of Gujarat state some 275 kms from Ahmedabad on February 24, 2008. According to the Director of Gujarat State Department of Archaeology Y S Rawat, a fort wall of stones - around 17 metres in width from a small site of the Indus Valley Civilisation is visible. According to Jeevan Singh Kharakwal, Associate Professor - Department of Archaeology -Institute of Rajasthan Studies, the deposits of 5 different civilisations - Early Harappan period - Matured Harappan Period - Late Harappan Period - Historic Harappan Period and the Medieval Harappan Period are visible. The Kanmer Archaeological Research Project, which includes the Japanese Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, started in April 2006 and will continue until March 2011.
An Indian scholar skillfully works on an ancient Oven recovered at the Kanmer Excavation site in the Kutch district of Gujarat state some 275 kms from Ahmedabad on February 24, 2008. According to the Director of Gujarat State Department of Archaeology Y S Rawat, a fort wall of stones - around 17 metres in width from a small site of the Indus Valley Civilisation is visible. According to Jeevan Singh Kharakwal, Associate Professor - Department of Archaeology -Institute of Rajasthan Studies, the deposits of 5 different civilisations - Early Harappan period - Matured Harappan Period - Late Harappan Period - Historic Harappan Period and the Medieval Harappan Period are visible. The Kanmer Archaeological Research Project, which includes the Japanese Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, started in April 2006 and will continue until March 2011.
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