Westbound Script [patched]
The "Westbound Kharosthi" died around the 5th century, suffocated by the Gupta Script (ancestor of Tibetan and Burmese). But its ghost survived in the angular spacing of the later Orkhon Turkic runes. When you look at the Orkhon inscriptions (Mongolia, 8th century), you see the DNA of Kharosthi’s vertical stacking, a finger pointing back to China.
To understand how these scripts operate in practice, one can look at the 1959 film , starring Randolph Scott and released by Warner Bros. Westbound Script
If you can provide a sentence or source where you saw "Westbound Script — paper," I can give you a precise answer. Otherwise, let me know the category, and I’ll help accordingly. The "Westbound Kharosthi" died around the 5th century,
The Westbound Scripts died not by violence, but by better technology. Between the 8th and 10th centuries, two things happened: To understand how these scripts operate in practice,
The script remained undeciphered until 1968, when Soviet linguist Dr. Irina Volkov at the Hermitage Museum connected a set of Sogdian "Ancient Letters" with a series of wooden tags found in a frozen burial mound in the Altai Mountains.