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Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
Sun Oct 14, 2018, 12:15 AM Oct 2018

Mount Vesuvius Boiled Its Victims' Blood and Caused Their Skulls to Explode


A new study of residue on skeletons from the 79 A.D. eruption indicates Herculaneum was hit with a 400 to 900 degree pyroclastic flow

By Jason Daley
SMITHSONIAN.COM
OCTOBER 10, 2018

In 79 A.D., Mount Vesuvius erupted, blanketing the nearby Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum in hot ash and preserving the casualties in lifelike poses. And as awful as being smothered by ash may be, a new study suggests that suffocation wasn’t the cause of death for many victims.

Archaeologists have found that some people perished in a pyroclastic surge, a wave of superheated gas and hot ash that literally boiled their blood and caused their skulls to explode, reports Neel V. Patel at Popular Science.

The evidence comes from boat houses in Herculaneum, a seaside resort town for wealthy Romans about 11 miles from Pompeii. In the 1980s and 1990s, archaeologists began uncovering the remains of several hundred people who had huddled in the shelters at the water’s edge to wait out the eruption. For hours the volcano, which had not erupted for hundreds of years, shot ash and chunks of pumice into the air, causing many people to evacuate or to seek shelter in solid structures. But it appears that a flow of superheated gas rolled down the mountainside at hundreds of miles per hour and blindsided the people in the waterfront chambers.

The new study, published in the journal PLoS One, presents more evidence that the boat house victims were killed by heat, not suffocating ash fall. George Dvorsky at Gizmodo reports that researchers examined 100 samples of bones and skulls using special types of spectrometry that can detect very low concentrations of minerals. The team looked at strange red and black residues found on the bones, determining that they had unusually high concentrations of iron. Those types of concentrations occur in two types of situations: when metal objects are subjected to high heat, and when blood is boiled away.

Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mount-vesuvius-boiled-its-victims-blood-and-caused-their-skulls-explode-180970504/#7cgXx2uST3lVXCGu.99
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Mount Vesuvius Boiled Its Victims' Blood and Caused Their Skulls to Explode (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2018 OP
.... ...horrific. JHan Oct 2018 #1
Ow MFM008 Oct 2018 #2
If the gas moved at hundreds of miles per hour, death was probably instantaneous. 3Hotdogs Oct 2018 #4
Hum. Remind me to remind the spa operators to turn the heat down next time I go. ... SWBTATTReg Oct 2018 #3
The article points to additional evidence. Igel Oct 2018 #5
I'll skip the barbecued ribs today... defacto7 Oct 2018 #6

SWBTATTReg

(22,129 posts)
3. Hum. Remind me to remind the spa operators to turn the heat down next time I go. ...
Sun Oct 14, 2018, 04:13 AM
Oct 2018

Not a laughing matter but it's amazing how they can deduct and analyze these things, isn't it?

Igel

(35,317 posts)
5. The article points to additional evidence.
Sun Oct 14, 2018, 11:04 AM
Oct 2018

It was fairly obvious years ago. People hiding down by the river with their skulls exploded outward. There was also charred bone--but only bone close to the surface, on body parts that would have been exposed to the air. In other words, the air was so hot that it dried the outside of the body and then burned off layers of skin and flesh down to some bone, but not the entire skeleton.

It would have been an instant death following a moment of truly intense pain.

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