AI Article Synopsis

  • Ancient civilizations, like the Indus Civilization, faced challenges with migration similar to those modern nation-states experience, developing policies to manage people's movements.
  • Recent isotopic studies of tooth enamel from burial sites in Harappa and Farmana reveal migration patterns, indicating that many individuals were first-generation immigrants from resource-rich areas during childhood.
  • The findings suggest that the Indus tradition of inhumation was a regulated practice linked to migration, promoting socioeconomic integration among diverse groups over centuries.

Article Abstract

Just as modern nation-states struggle to manage the cultural and economic impacts of migration, ancient civilizations dealt with similar external pressures and set policies to regulate people's movements. In one of the earliest urban societies, the Indus Civilization, mechanisms linking city populations to hinterland groups remain enigmatic in the absence of written documents. However, isotopic data from human tooth enamel associated with Harappa Phase (2600-1900 BC) cemetery burials at Harappa (Pakistan) and Farmana (India) provide individual biogeochemical life histories of migration. Strontium and lead isotope ratios allow us to reinterpret the Indus tradition of cemetery inhumation as part of a specific and highly regulated institution of migration. Intra-individual isotopic shifts are consistent with immigration from resource-rich hinterlands during childhood. Furthermore, mortuary populations formed over hundreds of years and composed almost entirely of first-generation immigrants suggest that inhumation was the final step in a process linking certain urban Indus communities to diverse hinterland groups. Additional multi disciplinary analyses are warranted to confirm inferred patterns of Indus mobility, but the available isotopic data suggest that efforts to classify and regulate human movement in the ancient Indus region likely helped structure socioeconomic integration across an ethnically diverse landscape.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4414352PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0123103PLOS

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