- 10 Mar 2016 21:57
#14659510
Briefing
This civilization's timeline is commonly cited at around 2,500 BC but some sources contend it was older.
Now, there are a slew of theories as to how civilized this culture was. Certainly the way in how the towns were constructed would support the claim they had city planning. Plumbing was also found and then there are the claims of why the towns were abandoned.
Not to go off topic with the whole nuclear war issue, but this is the oldest concrete civilization we have discovered. What are the thoughts on here about their evidence of other lost civilizations?
For me the one thing that is confusing about the human race is that Neanderthals who may have been smarter than Homosapiens went extinct roughly 40-50,000 years ago for unexplained reasons and that if you look at the timeline of Earth, we occupy a very tiny part of it.
The Indus Valley Civilization seems to indicate to me that humanity was capable of some great things long before our technological advancements of the last thousand years.
This civilization's timeline is commonly cited at around 2,500 BC but some sources contend it was older.
Now, there are a slew of theories as to how civilized this culture was. Certainly the way in how the towns were constructed would support the claim they had city planning. Plumbing was also found and then there are the claims of why the towns were abandoned.
Not to go off topic with the whole nuclear war issue, but this is the oldest concrete civilization we have discovered. What are the thoughts on here about their evidence of other lost civilizations?
For me the one thing that is confusing about the human race is that Neanderthals who may have been smarter than Homosapiens went extinct roughly 40-50,000 years ago for unexplained reasons and that if you look at the timeline of Earth, we occupy a very tiny part of it.
The Indus Valley Civilization seems to indicate to me that humanity was capable of some great things long before our technological advancements of the last thousand years.
What is crime if the end result affects only the individual who commits it?