Circa 150 BCE to 100 CE Shunga Empire or Kushan Empire era Hindu templeguard rail pillars were excavated from a filled well of Bhadas village as well as from Hathin, and they are now exhibited in the Haryana State Museum.[6][7][8] The railing pillars have images of Yaksha and 3 mortises carved on them. These pillars from Bhadas and Hathin might have belonged to the same monument as the lens-shaped mortises on both have same size, same color of stone, same distance between each of three mortises craved on the pillars and same yaksha carvings.[9] The yaksha on the Bhadas pillar stands on protome of a cloven hoofed animal, with raised now-broken right hand holding a flower and left hand on the hip holding the drapery.[9]Roundel on the top of the pillar has a composite animal with protome of deer and hindquarters of makara superimposed over a blooming lotus.[9]
Ecology
Bhadas lake is an important wetland in the area that receives many migratory birds here in the winter season and other ponds around Nuh, including wood pigeon and stock dove that arrive in pairs.[10]