You also said academia is not accepting this is also wrong
More list of scientists geologists etc etc from various academics who have partly or fully contributed or acknowledged existence of SARASVATI.
Chatterjee, A. 2017. Provenance of Late Quaternary Continental Sediments in Western India: Insights from Trace Element and Isotope Geochemistry. PhD thesis, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Vadodara (
https://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/handle/10603/199906
); cited with author’s permission. Chatterjee, A. and Ray, J.S. 2018. Geochemistry of Harappan potteries from Kalibangan and sediments in the Ghaggar River: Clues for a dying river. Geoscience Frontiers 9:1203-1211. Clift, P.D., Carter, A., Giosan, L., Durcan, J., Duller, G.A.T., Macklin, M.G., Alizai, A., Tabrez, A.R., Danish, M., VanLaningham, S., and Fuller, D.Q. 2012. U-Pb zircon dating evidence for a Pleistocene Sarasvati River and capture of the Yamuna River. Geology 40(3):212-215. Cunningham,
A. 1871. The Ancient Geography of India. Trübner & Co., London; 1924. Second revised ed., Calcutta, Reprint-2002. Munshiram Manoharlal, New Delhi. Danino, M. 2010. The Lost River: On the Trail of the Sarasvati
. Penguin Books, New Delhi. Danino, M. 2016. Environmental factors in the decline of the Indus–Sarasvati Civilization. In, The Environment and Indian History (Ed., Nanditha Krishna)
.The C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation, Chennai, pp. 132-148. Danino, M. Forthcoming - a. Climate, Environment, and the Harappan Civilization. In, Environmental History of India (Ed., R. Chakrabarti), Volume 1. Indian Council of Historical Research, New Delhi. (Preprint: Climate_Environment_and_the_Harappan_Civilization. Danino, M. Forthcoming - . In, Proceedings of a National Conference on Indian History: Emerging Perspectives. Indian Council of Historical Research, New Delhi, March 5-7, 2018.
. Dave, A.K., Courty, M.-A., Fitzsimmons K.E., and Singhvi, A.K. 2019. Revisiting the contemporaneity of a mighty river and the Harappans: Archaeological, stratigraphic and chronometric constraints. Quaternary Geochronology 49:230-235. Durcan, J.A., Thomas, D.S.G., Gupta, S., Pawar, V., Singh R.N., and Petrie, C.A. 2019. Holocene landscape dynamics in the Ghaggar–Hakra palaeochannel region at the northern edge of the Thar Desert, northwest India. Quaternary International 501(B):317– 327. Gangal, K., Vahia, M.N. and Adhikari, R. 2010. Spatio-temporal analysis of the Indus urbanization. Current Science 98:846-852. Giosan, L., Clift, P.D., Macklinc, M.G., Fuller, D.Q., Constantinescu, S., Durcan, J.A., Stevens, T., Duller, G.A.T., Tabrez, A.R., Gangal, K., Adhikari, R., Alizai, A., Filip, F., VanLaningham, S. and Syvitski, J.P.M. 2012. Fluvial landscapes of the Harappan civilization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109(26):E1688-E1694. Giosan, L., Clift, P.D., Macklinc M.G., and Fuller, D.Q. 2013. Sarasvati. Current Science 105:888-890. Habib, I. 2001. Imagining River Sarasvati: A defence of commonsense. In, Proceedings of the Indian History Congress , 61st
session, Kolkata, 2000-01, pp. 67-92. Reproduced-2001 in: Social Scientist 29(1-2):332-333:46 ff. Joshi, J.P., Bala, M. and Ram, J. 1984. The Indus Civilization: A reconsideration on the basis of distribution maps. In, Frontiers of the Indus Civilization (Eds., B.B. Lal, S.P. Gupta and S. Asthana). Books and Books, New Delhi, pp. 511-530. Khan, I. and Sinha, R. 2019. Discovering ‘buried’ channels of the palaeo-Yamuna River in NW India using geophysical evidence: Implications for major drainage reorganization and linkage to the Harappan Civilization. Journal of Applied Geophysics 167:128-139. Kochhar, R. 2000. The Vedic People: Their History and Geography
.
Orient Longman, HyderabadKshetrimayum, K.S. and Bajpai, V.N. 2011. Establishment of missing stream link between the Markanda River and the Vedic Saraswati River in Haryana, India: Geoelectrical resistivity approach. Current Science 100:1719-1724. Lal, B.B., Joshi, J.P., Thapar, B.K. and Bala, M. 2003. Excavations at Kalibangan: The early Harappans (1960–69).
Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India, 98. New Delhi, 340 p. Mehdi, S.M., Pant, N.C., Saini, H.S., Mujtaba S.A.I. and Pande, P. 2016. Identification of palaeochannel configuration in the Saraswati River basin in parts of Haryana and Rajasthan, India, through digital remote sensing and GIS. Episodes 39:29-38. Mughal, M.R. 1993. Recent archaeological research in the Cholistan Desert. In: G.L. Possehl (ed.), Harappan Civilization: A Recent Perspective. 2ndedn, Oxford & IBH, New Delhi, pp. 85-95. Mughal, M.R. 1997. Ancient Cholistan: Archaeology and Architecture. Ferozsons, Lahore. Müller, F.M. 1882. Vedic Hymns, part I. Volume 32 in Sacred Books of the East. Reprint 2001, Motilal Banarsidass, Delhi. Orengo, H.A. and Petrie, C.A. 2017. Large-scale, multi-temporal remote sensing of palaeo-river networks: A case study from northwest India and its implications for the Indus Civilisation. Remote Sensing 9(7), 735; doi:10.3390/rs9070735. Petrie, C.A., Singh, R.N., Bates, J., Dixit, Y., French, C.A.I., Hodell, D.A., Jones, P.J., Lancelotti, C., Lynam, F., Neogi, S., Pandey, A.K., Parikh, D., Pawar, V., Redhouse, D.I. and Singh, D.P. 2017. Adaptation to variable environments, resilience to climate change: Investigating land, water and settlement in Indus northwest India. Current Anthropology 58:1-30. Puri, V.M.K. 2001. Origin and course of Vedic Saraswati River in Himalaya – its secular desiccation episodes as deciphered from palaeo-glaciation and geomorphological signatures. Geological Survey of India, Special Publication 53:175-191. Puri, V.M.K. 2008. Vedic Sarasvati: Scientific signatures on its origin from the Himalaya. In: S. Kalyanaraman (ed.), Vedic River Saraswati and Hindu Civilization. Aryan Books International, New Delhi, pp. 14-35. Rajani, M.B. and Rajawat, A.S. 2011. Potential of satellite-based sensors for studying distribution of archaeological sites along palaeochannels: Harappan sites a case study. Journal of Archaeological Science 38:2010-2016. Saini, H.S., Tandon, S.K., Mujtaba, S.A.I., Pant, N.C., and Khorana, R.K. 2009. Reconstruction of buried channel-floodplain systems of the northwestern Haryana Plains and their relation to the “Vedic” Saraswati. Current Science 97: 1634-1643. Saini, H.S. and Mujtaba, S.A.I. 2010. Luminescence dating of the sediments from a buried channel loop in Fatehabad area, Haryana: Insight into Vedic Saraswati River and its environment. Geochronometria37:29-35. Shinde, V., Osada, T., Uesugi, A. and Kumar, M. 2008. A Report on Excavations at Farmana 2007-08. Occasional Paper 6, Linguistics, Archaeology and the Human Past, Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Kyoto. Singh, R.N., Petrie, C.A., Pawar, V., Pandey, A.K., Neogi, S., Singh, M., Singh, A.K., Parikh, D. and Lancelotti, C. 2010. Changing patterns of settlement in the rise and fall of Harappan urbanism and beyond: A preliminary report on the Rakhigarhi hinterland survey 2009. Man and Environment 35(1):37-53. Singh, A., Paul, D., Sinha, R., Thomsen, K.J. and Gupta, S. 2016.Geochemistry of buried river sediments from Ghaggar Plains, NW India: Multi-proxy records of variations in provenance, paleoclimate, and paleovegetation patterns in the Late Quaternary. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 449:85-100. Singh, A., Thomsen, K.J., Sinha, R., Buylaert, J.-P., Carter, A., Mark, D.F., Mason, P.J., Densmore, A.L., Murray, A.S., Jain, M., Paul, D. and Gupta, S. 2017. Counter-intuitive influence of Himalayan river morphodynamics on Indus Civilisation urban settlements. Nature Communications 8:1617, doi: 10.1038/s41467-017-01643-9
This is just some of them which I listed,there are even more and more are upcoming to accept it,cancel them also as "hindutva"