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Saddle Querns and Stratigraphy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

While reviewing our book—Report on the Excavations at Nasik and Jorve—Dr. Allchin has raised a very important point. He says that the “legged grinding stools” found at Nasik and ascribed by us to period II A “would have been happier in II B or even III”. The question is when an object is found in a well-stratified deposit in a lower layer, should it be dated to a later period because at some place—here Sirkap II—it has been found in a later period, or should the entire layer be dated to the later period even though well-sealed by an upper layer? In this particular case the legged quern has undoubtedly a comparatively short duration as pointed out by Sankalia much earlier; but it is very widely spread in India. This immediately cautions us to be careful in assigning a date to objects found nearly 1,500 miles apart.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1957

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References

page 209 note 1 JBAS, pt. 3 and 4 (1956), pp. 245–46Google Scholar.

page 209 note 2 “Cultural significance of Saddle querns,” Journal of the Anthropological Society (Bombay), 1950, New Series, vol. iv, no. 1, pp. 3539, pis. i to ivGoogle Scholar.

page 209 note 3 Dikshit, M. G., Tripuri-1952 (1955), pp. 106107Google Scholar.

page 209 note 4 For the chart of stratigraphical co-relation and other details of cultural sequence of these sites see, Sankalia, H. D., Journal of the M.S. University of Baroda, vol. ii, No. 2, (1953), pp. 99114Google Scholar; Sankalia, H. D., Rao, B. Subba, and Deo, S. B., “The Archaeological sequence of Central India”, South-western Journal of Anthropology, vol. 9, No. 4, 1953, pp. 343–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Deo, S. B., “Beads from the excavations at Maheshwar and Navda Toli (Madhya Bharat),” Journal of the University of Bombay, vol. xxiii, pt. 4, 01 1955, pp. 120Google Scholar.

page 210 note 1 See, Sankalia, H. D., JNSI, xv, ii, pi. vii, iGoogle Scholar; also BDCRI, vol. xiv, No. 1, 06, 1952, p. 58Google Scholar.

page 210 note 2 For a general account of the stratigraphical and cultural sequence see Indian Archaeology—A Review, 1955–56, pp. 8 ff.

page 211 note 1 Mehta, R. N., Excavations at Timberva (1953), (Baroda, 1955), p. 25Google Scholar.

page 211 note 2 ASI, AR, 1902–1903, pp. 117, 139.

page 211 note 3 M. G. Dikshit, loo. cit.

page 211 note 4 Indian Archaeology—A Review, 1955–56, (Delhi, 1956), pp. 1 and 11Google Scholar.

page 212 note 1 Transl. R. Shamasastry (1929), p. 51.

page 212 note 2 Kosambi, D. D., Indian History, (Bombay, 1956), p. 200 ff.Google Scholar