7. The sellers in the beginning of the Ganga indus plain were
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The sellers in the beginning of the Ganga-Indus plain were farmers.
More information:
- Agriculture went high in Ganga-Indus plain due to fertile lands, created by rivers. This was strongly supported by river water.
- But as time passed, that civilization grew to be expanding in various works. Many new professions were created.
- Many farmers became moneylenders and many became sellers. The term 'seller' is very similar to 'small merchants'.
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The Ganga Indus plain
Explanation:
- The Indus–Ganga plains, often known as the "Great Plains," are huge floodplains formed by the rivers Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra.
- They run parallel to the Himalayan ranges, draining most of Northern and Eastern India from Jammu and Kashmir and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in the west to Assam in the east.
- The Ganges (Ganga) River, which rises high in the Himalaya Mountains and empties into the Bay of Bengal, is regarded as a sacred body of water by Hindus.
- More than 400 million people live in the river basin surrounding the city.
- The Ganges (Ganga) River flows through northern India and is considered sacred by Hindus.
- In India, the Ganges River Basin, which supplies the river, has a population of about 400 million people.
- A river basin is a territory drained by a river and any of its tributaries, such as the Ganges.
- This implies that rains and surface water from the basin run into surrounding rivers
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