The decline of Harappan culture is difficult to explain. During its late 
  phase between 2000 and 1700 BC 'The Indus Valley Civilization as a distinct 
  entity gradually ceased to exist'. Historians have different opinions 
  regarding the causes of the decay and disappearance of the Harappan culture. 
  Various causes have been ascribed for its weakening and then decay: Increase 
  in rainfall, earthquake, decrease in fertility of soil, floods, Aryan 
  invasion, disease etc.
  Mortimer Wheeler pointed out that the Harappan culture was destroyed by the 
  Aryans. The Aryans were more skilled at warfare and were powerful than the 
  Harappans. In the last phase of Mohenjodaro, men and women and children were 
  massacred in the streets and houses. But there is very little evidence on this 
  opinion.
	
Sir John Marshal, Lambrick and E.J.H Mackay suggest that the decline of the 
Harappan civilization was mainly due to the vagaries of the Indus River. But 
this theory is partly true. Some of the evidence of the devastation by floods 
has been found at Mohenjodaro and Lothal but there is no such evidence in 
respect of other sites like Kalibangan. 
Some historians suggest that the 
first urban civilization came to an end around 1700 BC because its numerous 
small settlements grew beyond their natural limits leading to the mismanagement 
of natural resources. Although the theory of ecological factors for the decline 
of the Harappan civilization is latest yet it does not give us complete answer. 
Historians are of the view that the decline of the Indus Civilization was not 
the result of a single event; it was a slow decline and a result of combination 
of factors.