After her return to India, Mukherjee was commissioned by the
Anthropological Survey of India (ASI) to document the craft practices of metal-craftsmen in Central India. From 1961 up until 1964, she worked as a Senior Research Fellowship at the ASI and continued to conduct surveys on metal-craftsmen across India and Nepal. Her journey in India spread across the tribal heartland in the state of
Madhya Pradesh, the east and the south. She was on a quest to discover the confluence of art forms with the daily lives of the artisans. During her tenure as a Senior Fellow, she was also closely associated with the promoters of 'living traditions' such as Prabash Sen and
Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay. Simultaneously, she pursued a career as a writer of children's stories and published a few books,
Little Flower Shefali and Other Stories,
Kalo and the Koel and
Catching Fish and Other Stories being some of the notable ones. She also published one monograph,
Metal Craft in India in 1978, and two books on the traditional metal craft in India namely
Metal Craftsmen in India in 1979 and
In Search of Viswakarma in 1994. Meera Mukherjee died in 1998, at the age of 75. ==Awards and honours==