The main reason why historians don't have a lot of information on this is because the people of the Indus river valley wrote in a language that historians today can't figure out what it means.
The Indus Valley Civilization<span> (IVC), was an ancient civilization thriving along the lower Indus River and the Ghaggar River-Hakra River in what is now </span>Pakistan<span> and western </span>India<span> from the twenty-eighth century </span>B.C.E.<span> to the eighteenth century </span>B.C.E.<span> Another name for this civilization is the </span>Harappan Civilization of the Indus Valley<span>, in reference to its first excavated city of Harappa. The Indus Valley Civilization stands as one of the great early civilizations, alongside </span>ancient Egypt<span> and </span>Sumerian Civilization<span>, as a place where human settlements organized into cities, invented a system of </span>writing<span> and supported an advanced culture. </span>Hinduism<span>and the culture of the Indian people can be regarded as having roots in the life and practices of this civilization.</span>
Panfilo de Narvaez was a Spanish explorer and soldier who helped conquer Cuba in 1511 and led a Spanish royal expedition to North America in 1527. After surviving a hurricane near Cuba, his expedition landed on the west coast of Florida, near Tampa Bay in April 1528, claiming the land for Spain.