Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin announced a $1 million prize for deciphering the Indus Valley Civilization script, which remains undeciphered despite numerous attempts over the past century.
- Indus script (~3300–1300 BCE) is the earliest writing system in the Indian subcontinent, undeciphered to date.
- Found at ~60 sites; ~3,500 specimens on seals, pottery, and amulets.
- Inscriptions are short (average 5 signs), written right to left, occasionally boustrophedon.
- Contains pictographic signs, human/animal motifs, and a unique ‘unicorn’ symbol.
- Deciphering could reveal links to Vedic practices and Dravidian/Indo-European languages.
- Key sites: Harappa, Lothal, Dholavira, Rakhigarhi, Kalibangan.
- Timeline: Early Harappan (3500–2600 BCE), Mature Harappan (2600–1900 BCE), Late Harappan (1900–1300 BCE).