ASI transfers Rakhigarhi skeletons to AnSI for a scientific investigation

I now have sufficient facts from Tier 1 (pib.gov.in), Tier 3 (nature.com, britannica.com), and Tier 4 (business-standard.com, downtoearth.org.in) sources, plus the article content. Here is the study note.


ASI Transfers Rakhigarhi Skeletons to AnSI for Scientific Investigation

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note — June 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Site name Rakhigarhi
Location Hisar district, Haryana
Size ~550 hectares (largest known Harappan settlement)
Civilisation Indus-Saraswati / Harappan Civilisation
Habitation phases Early Harappan (3200–2700 BCE) to Mature Harappan (2700–1800 BCE)
Mound 7 Identified burial/cemetery mound; 56 skeletons recovered
Key specimen Female skeleton, ~4,600 years old
DNA finding Iranian-related ancestry; no steppe pastoralist gene
Transferring body Archaeological Survey of India (ASI)
Receiving body Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI)
Instrument Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)
Parent ministry (both) Ministry of Culture, Government of India
AnSI Director B.V. Sharma (as of June 2026)
Iconic Site status Yes — one of five Iconic Archaeological Sites designated by GoI [S3]
Comparator sites Mohenjo-daro (Pakistan), Dholavira (Gujarat, India — UNESCO WHS)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Historical

Legal / Constitutional / Administrative

Social / Ethical

Geopolitical / Strategic


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Rakhigarhi is the largest known settlement of the Harappan Civilisation, covering approximately 550 hectares, located in Hisar district, Haryana. [S1][S2]
  2. The site shows continuous habitation from Early Harappan (3200–2700 BCE) to Mature Harappan (2700–1800 BCE). [S2]
  3. Mound 7 at Rakhigarhi has been identified as a burial mound; 56 skeletons were recovered from it. [S1]
  4. The female skeleton from Rakhigarhi is approximately 4,600 years old and was excavated from Mound 7. [S1]
  5. DNA analysis of the Rakhigarhi skeleton revealed no steppe pastoralist (Pontic-Caspian) ancestry — she carried Iranian Neolithic-related ancestry. [S4]
  6. The skeletal remains were transferred from ASI (Archaeological Survey of India) to AnSI (Anthropological Survey of India) under a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). [S1]
  7. Both ASI and AnSI function under the Union Ministry of Culture. [S1]
  8. AnSI stands for Anthropological Survey of India — a national research institute, not to be confused with ASI (Archaeological Survey of India). [S1]
  9. Rakhigarhi is one of the five Iconic Archaeological Sites identified by the Government of India for holistic development. [S3]
  10. Among 61 skeletal samples screened in the landmark 2019 DNA study, only one sample (the Rakhigarhi woman) yielded sequenceable DNA. [S4]
  11. The AMASR Act, 1958 governs ASI's custodianship over excavated archaeological remains in India.
  12. Rakhigarhi is estimated to be potentially 500 years older than Mohenjo-daro. [S2]
  13. The word "Aryan" is now often replaced by "steppe pastoralist" in academic literature to avoid racial connotations. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-I: Indian Heritage and Culture — Indus Valley Civilisation; Art & Culture; Ancient History; Impact of external migrations on Indian culture. - GS-III: Science & Technology — Developments in biotechnology, genomics, and their applications; Awareness in areas of IT, space, computers, etc.

Specific syllabus headings: - GS-I: "Salient features of ancient Indian history"; "The diversity of India"; origins of Indian civilisation. - GS-III: "Biotechnology and its applications"; science and technology developments and their implications.

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The DNA findings from the Rakhigarhi skeleton have reignited the debate on the Aryan Migration Theory. Critically examine the evidence for and against the theory in light of recent archaeogenetic research." (GS-I) 2. "Discuss the significance of the ASI–AnSI MoU for the transfer of Rakhigarhi skeletons. How can multidisciplinary scientific methods deepen our understanding of the Harappan Civilisation?" (GS-I + GS-III) 3. "What ethical considerations arise from the use of ancient DNA (aDNA) extracted from human skeletal remains in reconstructing Indian prehistory?" (GS-IV / GS-I)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Harappan / Indus Valley Civilisation Rakhigarhi is its largest site; context for all findings
Aryan Migration Theory vs. Out-of-India Theory The Rakhigarhi DNA is the sharpest empirical point in this debate
Dholavira (UNESCO WHS, 2021) Another mega Harappan site; compare urban planning and significance
Ancient DNA and Archaeogenomics Methodology behind Rakhigarhi findings; broader GS-III relevance
Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) — mandate & legislation AMASR Act 1958; ASI's excavation and conservation role
Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI) Its mandate in physical & cultural anthropology; Ministry of Culture
Iconic Archaeological Sites Scheme GoI's 5-site development initiative includes Rakhigarhi
Steppe Pastoralists and South Asian Genetic History Critical for understanding post-Harappan Bronze Age migrations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. ASI vs. AnSI confusion: ASI = Archaeological Survey of India (excavation, monument protection); AnSI = Anthropological Survey of India (human populations, physical anthropology). Both are under the Ministry of Culture but have entirely different mandates. A common MCQ trap.
  2. Rakhigarhi's size: Aspirants often cite Mohenjo-daro as the largest Harappan site. Rakhigarhi (~550 ha) surpasses Mohenjo-daro in area and is the largest known Harappan settlement.
  3. DNA finding direction: The finding is that the Rakhigarhi woman lacked steppe ancestry — not that she had it. Misremembering the direction inverts the implication for the AMT debate.
  4. "Aryan" terminology: In UPSC answers, note that "Aryan" in the migration debate refers to steppe pastoralists (Yamnaya-related), not a racial category. Conflating the two is both academically wrong and a Mains-answer risk.
  5. Number of skeletons: The total transfer involves 56 skeletons; the landmark DNA study was conducted on one of 61 samples screened. Confusing these numbers is a frequent factual slip.
  6. Dholavira vs. Rakhigarhi: Both are large Harappan sites in India, but Dholavira is in Gujarat (got UNESCO WHS status in 2021), while Rakhigarhi is in Haryana. Do not conflate.

11. Sources