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Tuesday, Sep 24, 2024
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100 years of the discovery of the Indus Civilisation: The stories you haven’t heard yet

After scholar-archaeologist John Marshall revealed the Indus Civilisation to the world in 1924, a look at the science behind one of history’s biggest finds

Updated: September 23, 2024 05:23 IST

How do great discoveries take place and what can we learn — a century later — by juxtaposing the 1924 discovery of the Indus Civilisation with them? I became interested in the process of scientific discoveries in order to understand if an archaeological tale of discovery shares features with other such histories. One common element that struck me was the idea of ‘the slow hunch’ in Steven Johnson’s bestseller, Where Good Ideas Come From (2010). The pathways through which fuzzy intuitions can develop into big ideas are well described in this work.

Among its case studies is one that focuses on Joseph Priestley who, in deciding to seal a sprig of mint in glass (to prove that plants create oxygen), was building upon an insight that went back to his boyhood. The young Priestley had apparently trapped spiders in glass jars in the belief that “there was something that was interesting in the way that organisms perished when you sealed them in closed vessels, something that pointed to the larger truth”. He kept this hunch alive and eventually it yielded fruit, some two decades later.