Twenty years ago, the way we did agriculture, was very similar in pattern to the ways of the Indus Valley people.” He falters a little while drawing on comparisons between the practice of burying the dead among the Harappans and the ritual of cremation in modern-day Hinduism. “You can say, there is a continuity of at least 75 per cent from then to now,” Mallik claims. Dharampal too, is not far behind with this affirmation. “The entire settlement at Rakhigarhi has been traced along the Drishadvati river, which was a part of the river Saraswati,” he claims. Recent excavations at Mound III have revealed a water reservoir, which is further fuelling the claims of the existence of a drying river that compelled the Harappan people to explore means of water storage. Both Mallik and Dharampal state that their information comes from the ASI reports as well as the conversations among ASI officials that they have overheard in the years they have spent at the site. Stone plaques at the front of each mound, installed by the ASI, back the narrative that is propounded by locals such as these two.