British-Era Coins & Dinosaur Fossils Found in Visakhapatnam Seabed

A significant underwater exploration off the Visakhapatnam coast has uncovered a trove of British-era coins and prehistoric fossils. The discovery provides a unique glimpse into both the colonial history and the deep geological past of the Bay of Bengal region. An exhibition organized by archaeology scholars showcases these finds, including coins from dynasties like the Satavahanas and Mauryas. Research scholars describe the collection as a living historical bridge from the dawn of humanity to modern independence.

Key Points: Ancient Coins & Fossils Discovered Off Visakhapatnam Coast

  • Underwater discovery off Visakhapatnam
  • British-era coins & ancient fossils
  • Exhibition spans Mahajanapadas to 1947
  • Features Satavahana & Mauryan dynasties
3 min read

Submerged secrets: British-era coins and ancient fossils unearthed off Visakhapatnam coast

Rare British-era coins and prehistoric fossils unearthed from the Bay of Bengal, showcased in a stunning Andhra University exhibition.

"a bridge of the past mixed with that of the present itself - Shaswati Jagatpatnaik"

Visakhapatnam, April 20

In a discovery that has sent ripples through the scientific and archaeological communities, a trove of British-era coins and prehistoric fossils has been recovered from the seabed off the coast of Visakhapatnam.

The find, made during recent underwater explorations, offers a rare, layered look into both the colonial history and the ancient geological past of the Bay of Bengal.

An exhibition in Visakhapatnam, featuring rocks and coins dating back to the era of dinosaurs, is leaving everyone astonished.

Archaeology scholars in Visakhapatnam have organised this exhibition to showcase fossils thousands of years old, rocks with unique wood-like textures, and remnants recovered from the depths of oceans and lakes.

Shaswati Jagatpatnaik, a research scholar from Andhra University, describes the exhibition as a "living testimony" and a historical bridge that spans the dawn of humanity to modern independence, showcasing a vast collection of fossils, regional heritage, and ancient coinage from dynasties such as the Satavahanas and Mauryas.

"We are witnessing here today what you can say is a bridge of the past mixed with that of the present itself. And this exhibition is the living testimony of it. Not only it features a private collection of the not only coins and fossils starting from the dawn of humanity up until the modern day British times but also it features all the pictures as well as visual representations of the heritage sites popular around Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, along with a brief history of Andhra University, the display of which can be seen in the front here," said Jagatpatnaik.

"Basically, the coin collection presented here starts from the early age of the Mahajanapadas and goes on up until 1947, the Indian independence movement. And the prominent dynasties whose coins are featured here include Satavahanas, Ikshvakus, Vishnukundinas, Mauryas, and Guptas, alongside some foreign variety coins," Jagatpatnaik added..

Speaking to ANI, Research scholar from the Department of History and Archaeology, Andhra University, Sneha Kalampudi said that, "The Britishers started the construction of railways in India during the 1850s, but when it comes to Andhra, it started between 1862. The first railway line was from Renigunta during the 1860s, and when it comes to Vishakhapatnam, the very first railway station is Waltair, constructed in 1896. Later, after post-independence India, the railways got nationalised. We had a zone called South Central Zone, which was in combined Andhra Pradesh, but after the 2014 bifurcation, it's our bad, actually, it's the zone headquarters that belonged to Telangana."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
This is incredible interdisciplinary work. Connecting geological history with colonial and ancient Indian history through a single exhibition. The "bridge" metaphor is perfect. Hope this gets more funding and a permanent museum space.
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Vikram M
Wah! Dinosaurs *and* Mauryan coins from the same region? Our history is so deep, literally and figuratively. The mention of the railway history was a nice touch too, though a bit sad about the zone headquarters issue post-bifurcation. Jai Andhra!
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Rohit P
Great discovery, but a respectful criticism: the article focuses a lot on the British-era coins. I wish there was more detail about our indigenous dynasties like the Satavahanas and Ikshvakus. Their maritime trade history is what made the coast prosperous long before the British arrived.
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Priya S
As someone from Vizag, this makes me so proud! 🥳 We always talk about the port and the beaches, but this shows our city's roots go back millennia. Must visit this exhibition with my kids next weekend. Well done to the research scholars!
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David E
The layered timeline here is astounding. Prehistoric fossils, ancient Indian empires, and colonial history all in one find. It underscores how India's narrative is written in layers of stone, metal, and now, recovered from the sea. A remarkable archaeological achievement.

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