
BY: Steven L. Tuck
On Aug. 24, in A.D. 79, Mount Vesuvius erupted, shooting over 3 cubic miles of debris up to 20 miles (32.1 kilometers) in the air. As the ash and rock fell to Earth, it buried the ancient cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum.
According to most modern accounts, the story pretty much ends there: Both cities were wiped out, their people frozen in time. It only picks up with the rediscovery of the cities and the excavations that started in earnest in the 1740s.
SOURCE: https://studyfinds.org
‘A Ziarella va in America. Non è un titolo da film, ma una piacevole realtà. Il...
Italy is renowned for its natural beauty but it's also well-known for its heaving tourist...
"ITALIAN AMERICAN SONGBOOK", questo il titolo del progetto che ultimamente il pianista d'o...
by Maureen Corrigan If you don't know Elena Ferrante — and judging by conversat...
With Valentine's Day on the horizon now is the perfect time to get cracking on booking you...
by Hunter Davis 'You went to one of the best hotels in the world, in one of the s...
The harmony and the refined nature of the ceramics of the Capodimonte Museum alongside San...
Archaeologists have unearthed 'Nativity-like scene statues' in the ancient ruins of the Ro...