Three earthen jars found in the southern portion of the summit of site B, from E.
A large and two smaller jars, one with a conical base.
Of the excavations at the top of Mound B Sahni noted:
“The past year’s excavations show that the upper portion of this mound was re-occupied in later times, i.e., in the early centuries of the Christian era. One of these later remains came to light about six feet below the highest point of the mound. It is an irregular wall composed of brick-bats obtained from the site and mixed with bricks measuring 1’ 2” x 9 ½ "x 2 ¼ " which can be at once assigned to the Kushan or early Gupta period. Three feet lower down I found another structure composed of similar bricks … at the same level, the excavations revealed fragments of at least three earthen jars (B. 650, 980 and 982) with very narrow mouths resembling the Buddhist monks’ bottles with which we are familiar at other sites, and one or two terracotta heads of the same period.”
- Daya Ram Sahni ARASI 1924-25, p. 78.
For Vats’s description of Sahni’s excavations at the summit of Mound AB see Vats 1940, Vol. I., pp. 137-8, and catalogue of Photo 107.
Vats mentions the three jars with narrow mouths as “three pottery spouts with narrow apertures” (ibid, pp. 137-8).
Note: These are possibly not the three jars mentioned above.