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Brief introduction of the goddess of Indian valley

In the 1990s, archaeologists discovered a weathered limestone sculpture in the mountainous area of Wendia, which looks like a statue of the goddess, and the age should belong to the late Paleolithic period. This may be the earliest female idol found in India. From 2700 BC to 2400 BC, Zhuobu culture and Kurli culture appeared in the north and south of Balochistan province in Pakistan. In the village ruins of these cultures, a large number of pottery figurines with mother earth as the main image have been unearthed. This shows that goddess worship was widely popular at that time because of the development of agriculture and the strengthening of village relations. It is from these terracotta figures that people can get a glimpse of the typical Indian primitive mother god. Most of the pottery figurines in curry culture are busts above the waist, with a figure-eight base below. These songkhla figurines have bent arms, hands on hips, usually showing breasts, eyes made of pebbles, carefully combed hairstyles, oval ornaments similar to shells, armbands and bracelets. A large number of pottery figurines found in Zhuobo site also belong to Curry type. They wear headscarves, collars around their necks, big noses like bird's mouths, round eye sockets and slender mouths, and exaggerated breasts. Most of these statues are decorated with shell ornaments, which shows that they are responsible for both reproduction and fertility. This is proved by a stone carving penis found on Moghul Ghundai Mountain near the left bank of Zhobo River and a striking yoni sculpture on the mountain near Periano Ghundai on the right bank of the river.