Hindus (DNA F) lived in Peninsular India for over 60,000 years. They were highly advanced logic-based cultures that voluntarily moved out of Somalia and followed the Indian monsoon winds from the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal. They were rainwater people. They lived only along the perennial rainwater rivers of mountain ridges that were perpendicular to the monsoon winds. The monsoon winds reversed direction every 20,000 years due to the Earth's rotation around the Sun, called Axial tilt. When the winds blew west-to-east, the rivers on the west side of mountain ridges had an abundant supply of rainwater, and the rivers on the east side were dry. Similarly, when the winds blew east-to-west, the rivers on the east side of ridges had an abundant supply of rainwater, and the rivers on the west side were dry. The Indian rivers flipped every 20,000 years. Currently, the Yamuna, Mahanadi, Godavari, and Tapi are full, and the Saraswati, Ken, Sone, and Narmada are dry; 20,000 years ago, it was the exact opposite. Hindus relocated every 20,000 years to switch rivers to adapt to the changing climatic conditions. We created a digital X-ray, from the altitude data, to reveal the invisible Indian River system. The computer-generated river maps helped us reconstruct the migration path of Hindus.
Select a river in the listbox to see its digital representation.