During melting of polycrystalline Indium the structure of solid and liquid phases have been investigated by X-ray diffractometry (XRD) in I-g conditions. At melting point a re-orientation of crystalline grains occurs in the solid phase. The texture change, unusually rapid for a thermally activated process, is attributed to an abnormal increase of vacancy concentration. This explanation is in agreement with the observed shifts of XRD peaks towards lower angles. As a consequence of the texture change, the lattice planes facing the first formed liquid are (002) and (101) planes, i.e. those planes allocating Ist and 2nd neighbours around a given atom with shell radii very close to the mean distance of nearest neighbours in liquid as obtained fr...