Volume 6 / Number 3
1964
Special Edition: India, Pakistan, and Ceylon

Vol. 6 / No. 3
By: F.A. Khan
Archaeology in Pakistan
Pakistan has been a cradle of civilizations through the ages. It possesses one of the oldest and most distinguished cultural […]
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Vol. 6 / No. 3
By: George F. Dales
The Mythical Massacre at Mohenjo-Daro
Nothing delights the archaeologist more than excavating the ruins from some ancient disaster–be it a flood, earthquake, invasion, or massacre. […]
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Vol. 6 / No. 3
By: W. Norman Brown
The Indian Games of Pachisi, Chaupar, and Chausar
The Museum of the University of Pennsylvania owns several “boards”–they are actually made of cloth–used for playing the games known […]
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By: Peter Throckmorton
The Great Basses Wreck
When I arrived in Ceylon, a great deal of preliminary research had been done by Arthur Clarke and Mike Wilson […]
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Vol. 6 / No. 3
By: Arthur C. Clarke
Ceylon and the Underwater Archaeologist
Ceylon, where I have lived since 1956, is almost a virgin territory for the underwater archaeologist. My partner, Mike Wilson, […]
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Vol. 6 / No. 3
By: Samuel Noah Kramer
The Indus Civilization and Dilmun, the Sumerian Paradise Land
One of the most significant and impressive archaeological achievements of the twentieth century centers around the discovery of the ancient […]
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Vol. 6 / No. 3
By: A. Ghosh
Archaeology in India
Official archaeology in India is now over a century old: in December 1961 the Archaeological Survey of India, a Government […]
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