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The ancient Italian city of Pompeii soon experienced a second life after it was blanketed by pumice and ash from the Mount ...
In 79 CE, Mount Vesuvius erupted in what would become one of humanity’s most infamous ancient tragedies. Tens of centuries ...
SHOCKING new evidence has revealed that Romans returned to Pompeii after the devastating Mount Vesuvius eruption 1,946 years ...
Grains, legumes, and fish were all part of the diet of Pompeii’s ancient residents, according to recently analysed food ...
New evidence suggests people returned to live among the ruins of Pompeii after the ancient Roman city was devastated by a ...
A rchaeologists announced on Wednesday, August 6, that new excavations at Pompeii show evidence of resettlement after the ...
New excavations at Pompeii reveal that the city was reinhabited by survivors for centuries after the 79 CE Vesuvius eruption.
The cataclysmic eruption of Mount Vesuvius obliterated Pompeii in 79 CE, but the Roman city didn’t remain a lifeless disaster ...
Archaeologists unearth remarkable preserved Pompeii bathhouse in ‘once-in-a-century’ discovery - Spectacular bathhouses used to entertain Pompeiian’s in private home ...
Pompeii, 23 km (14 miles) southeast of Naples, was home to about 13,000 people when the volcanic eruption buried it under ash, pumice pebbles and dust, freezing it in time.
Scientists have painstakingly reconstructed a nearly 300-million-year-old forest perfectly preserved Pompeii-style in a remote corner of Inner Mongolia. An artist’s rendering is shown here.
Hundreds of papyrus scrolls were found in the 1750s in the remains of a lavish villa at the Roman town of Herculaneum, which along with nearby Pompeii was destroyed when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79AD ...