koṭhi) (1) the smelting furnace of the blacksmith kuṭire bica duljad.ko talkena, they were feeding the furnace with ore (2) the name of ēkuṭi has been given to the fire which, in lac factories, warms the water bath for softening the lac so that it can be spread into sheets to make a smelting furnace kuṭhi-o of a smelting furnace, to be made the smelting furnace of the blacksmith is made of mud, cone-shaped, 2’ 6” dia. a mountain L.(Samskritam) kuṭhi ‘a furnace for smelting iron ore, to smelt iron’ koṭe ‘forged (metal)(Santali) kuṭhi ‘a furnace for smelting iron ore to smelt iron’ kolheko kuṭhieda koles smelt iron (Santali) kuṭhi, kuṭi (Or. Indus Script cipher: Meluhha lexis of metalwork clustered as rebus words to decipher Susa/Elamite hieroglyphs कूटी v.l. Such rebus renderings may also help resolve the decipherment challenge posed by Proto-Elamite inscriptions which combine cuneiform texts with hieroglyph seal impressions. If the animals as hieroglyphs on the seal impression of the clay balls are identified, the hieroglyphs may be read rebus, assuming that the data storage system evolved as an adjunct to the Indus writing system to categorize the specific metalwork products which were exchanged in specific trade transactions of the type investigated by Christopher Woods. A remarkable report appeared in 2013 on the discovery by Christopher Woods and his team of researchers, of a "Prehistoric Code Found In Clay Balls From Mesopotamia May Represent First Data Storage System" (News report embedded). The excursus is a simple matching of the rebus (homonym) words of Meluhha lexis with the clearly identifiable, unambiguous hieroglyphs of Susa artisans who had inherited the Meluhha tradition of Indus writing system. The hieroglyphs signified on these artifacts are deciphered as metalwork catalogues, which are proclamations of artisans' creations using the following Meluhha lexis (vocabulary set). The hieroglyphs on these Susa artifact sets accessed primarily from the Louvre Museum, are presented and reviewed in this note, underlining the fact that Susa-Meluhha interactions spanned centuries and suggest presence of Meluhha settlements in and around Susa of 3rd and 2nd millennium BCE. Susa excavations have yielded other artifacts which also signify Indus Script hieroglyphs. Both 'rosetta stones' validate Indus Script ≠Corpora as catalogus catalogorum of metalwork by Meluhha artisans. cylinder seal carved with a bull and an Indus Script inscrition and 2. Two 'rosetta stones' of Indus Script from Susa are: 1.
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