A team of researchers from Federico II University Hospital in Italy discovered evidence suggesting that many people living in Herculaneum during the eruption of Mt. 79. Vesuvius was killed by the extreme heat characteristic pyroclastic flows. In their article published on the site in free access PLOS ONE, the group describes the warning signs of the heat damage they found in the remains of people residing in the ancient Roman city at the time.
Most people have learned in elementary school that Mount. Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD and covered cities such as Pompeii in ashes. The disaster was so sudden that many people were killed and buried in the ashes, leaving their "frozen" remains to be discovered by archaeologists about 1700 years later. Extensive research has shown that most of the victims in Pompeii died from injuries or suffocation caused by thick ash. But it was not the fate of many people living in the nearby town of Herculaneum. The researchers of this new effort found that many of them had been killed by the extreme heat of the pyroclastic flows.
Pyroclastic flows are flows composed of gases and volcanic materials (previous research has shown that they can flow downstream from an eruption at a maximum speed of 450 mph) and that temperatures reach 1000 degrees Celsius. flow, the result is instant death. The researchers found traces in the remains of many people who had taken refuge in a boathouse located near the sea at Herculaneum. The team began their investigation after learning that people were dying of thermal shock.
After a closer look at some of the remains, the researchers found red and black residue on parts of some bones. Previous research has suggested that this residue usually occurs when bones are burned near coins or other metal objects – the residue usually consists of iron particles. Previous research has also shown that such residues can also be caused by boiling blood leaving behind iron in suspension. The residue study showed that it was iron, although the researchers could not say with certainty whether it came from objects of blood or metals. The researchers also found evidence of exploded skulls, probably due to the vaporization of brain matter.
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More information:
Pierpaolo Petrone et al. A hypothesis of sudden vaporization of body fluid in the 79 victims of Vesuvius, PLOS ONE (2018). DOI: 10.1371 / journal.pone.0203210