Saraswati Wildlife Sanctuary Explained

Saraswati Wildlife Sanctuary
Map:India Haryana#India
Relief:yes
Coordinates:29.9928°N 76.3567°W
Location:Kaithal district, Haryana
Established:29 July 1988
Elevation:215

Saraswati Wildlife Sanctuary, also known as Seonsar Forest, is situated in Kaithal district of Haryana State, India. It is spread over an area of .[1]

Kalesar National Park, Morni Hills and Saraswati Wildlife Sanctuary are respectively first, second and third largest forest in Haryana.[2]

Location

It is away from Pehowa, from Kurukshetra, from Kaithal on the Pehowa-Cheeka-Patiala Road, from Patiala, from Ambala, from Chandigarh, from Hisar, from Karnal, from Delhi.[1]

It is only nearly from Bir Gurdialpura Wildlife Sanctuary in Patiala district of Punjab.

History

'Saraswati Plantation' was notified as Saraswati Wildlife Sanctuary on 29 July 1988.[2] 'Saraswati Wildlife Sanctuary' was notified as Saraswati Conservation Reserve on 11 October 2007.[1]

Archaeological remains

The Tribune reported on 9 April 2016 that Mahant and members of a dera of Nath yogis in the sanctuary found the ancient rectangular bricks from a 15 feet deep structure after an old banyan tree was uprooted. According to Rajendra Singh Rana, curator of Kurukshetra’s Srikrishna Museum, prima facie these bricks and structure appears to be older than 1500 years old as square bricks are associated with 1,500 years old Gupta period (320 CE to 550 CE) and these bricks are likely to be even older from the Kushan (30 CE to 375 CE) period as the Sarasvati river use to flow here.[3]

There is also a 40 years old water well made of small lakhauri bricks associated with the Mughal empire era.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Haryana Forest Department. Haryanaforest.gov.in. 11 May 2014. 12 May 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140512232130/http://haryanaforest.gov.in/protect.aspx. dead.
  2. Web site: Archived copy . 15 October 2014 . 24 September 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924025126/http://www.haryana-online.com/saraswati_plantation.htm . dead .
  3. Web site: Ancient remains found in Saraswati wildlife sanctuary. Tribuneindia.com. 18 July 2022.