Abstract

This paper describes the results of the surveys carried out along Ras Muari (Cape Monze, Karachi, Sindh) by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Lower Sindh and Las Bela in 2013 and 2014. The surveyed area coincides with part of the mythical land of the Ichthyophagoi, mentioned by the classical chroniclers. Many archaeological sites, mainly scatters and spots of fragmented marine and mangrove shells, were discovered and AMS dated along the northern part of the cape facing the Hab River mouth. The surveys have shown that fisher and shell gatherer communities temporarily settled in different parts of the headland. They began to exploit the sea resources during the Neolithic. However, the most important discovery consists of a unique fishers’ settlement with rectangular stone-walled structures located on a limestone terrace near Sonari (SNR-1), the first ever found along the northern coast of the Arabian Sea. The AMS dates show that it was settled mainly during the first half of the third millennium cal bc when the Indus Civilisation flourished in the area. Considering the importance of the discovery, all the material culture remains from the Sonari sites have been described and analysed in detail and, whenever possible, framed into the different phases of environmental changes and human adaptation to the coastal environment that have been interpreted thanks to a good series of AMS dates from marine and mangrove shells.

Highlights

  • This paper presents and discusses the research carried out in and by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Sindh and Las Bela (Balochistan, Pakistan), part of an archaeological project conducted in the region since

  • Sonari is the only Bronze Age fisher-gatherer village ever discovered along the northern coast of the Arabian Sea with rectangular stone structures and net sinkers

  • Sonari: the area surveyed in and with the location of the radiocarbon-dated sites of Pir Shah Jurio (PSH- ), Sonari (SNR- ) and Ras Muari (RMR- ) and two Mesolithic sites discovered near Sona Pass by A R Khan in the late s; distribution and chronology of the Sonari sites

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Summary

Paolo Biagi

This paper presents and discusses the research carried out in and by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Sindh and Las Bela (Balochistan, Pakistan), part of an archaeological project conducted in the region since. Previous surveys were carried out by Professor A R Khan of the Institute of Geography, Karachi University, during the second half of the s His surveys led to the discovery of many archaeological sites of different ages, from the Palaeolithic to the Buddhist and Muslim periods, among which is the prehistoric settlement of Sonari (SNR- ). Our surveys were conducted on foot in August and January by two of the present authors (PB and RN) They were repeated systematically four different times following the same track: starting from the Hab mouth, where the present fishers’ village of Sonari is located, walking from north-east to south-west across small fans and slope debris along the ridge that runs at the northern edge of the alluvial plain where the saddle inside which the prehistoric settlement of Sonari SNR- is located, and south-west towards the village of Mubarak and the Arabian Sea coast.

THE ANTIQUARIES JOURNAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING AND NATURAL RESOURCES Renato Nisbet and Paolo Biagi
This process is accurately described by
Uncal BP date
Limestone Limestone Sandstone Limestone
THE KNAPPED STONE ASSEMBLAGE Paolo Biagi
Unretouched microflakelet
THE POTTERY Michela Spataro
Site no Survey date Material
Fine red and slightly calcareous
Dark brown
DISCUSSION
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