Nobody knew anything about Moen-jo-Daro until 1922, when some villagers
found pieces of old smooth pots and old bricks at the place where the city was
discovered. These pieces of old pots and bricks were brought to Sir John
Marshall, an English civil servant, whose work it was to look after historical
remains. When he looked at them, he at once knew that they were pieces of
very old pots. He decided that the area should be dug up as there might be
remains of an old city.
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Nobody knew anything about Moen-jo-Daro until 1922, when some villagers
found pieces of old smooth pots and old bricks at the place where the city was
discovered. These pieces of old pots and bricks were brought to Sir John
Marshall, an English civil servant, whose work it was to look after historical
remains. When he looked at them, he at once knew that they were pieces of
very old pots. He decided that the area should be dug up as there might be
remains of an old city.
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