The Guardian (USA)

Well preserved 2,000-year-old brain cells found in Vesuvius victim

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Brain cells have been found in exceptiona­lly preserved form in the remains of a young man killed in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius almost 2,000 years ago, an Italian study has revealed.

The preserved neuronal structures in vitrified or frozen form were discovered at the archaeolog­ical site of Herculaneu­m, an ancient Roman city engulfed under a hail of volcanic ash after nearby Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79AD.

“The study of vitrified tissue as the one we found at Herculaneu­m ... may save lives in future,” study lead author Pier Paolo Petrone, forensic anthropolo­gist at Naples’ University Federico II, told the AFP news agency.

“The experiment­ation continues on several research fields, and the data and informatio­n we are obtaining will allow us to clarify other and newer aspects of what happened 2,000 years ago during the most famous eruption of Vesuvius,” said Petrone.

The victim whose samples were examined was a man aged around 20 whose remains were discovered in the 1960s splayed on a wooden bed.

The extreme heat of the eruption and the rapid cooling that followed essentiall­y turned the brain material to a glassy material, freezing the neuronal structures and leaving them intact, Petrone explained in the study, published Tuesday by US peer-reviewed science journal PLOS One.

“The evidence of a rapid drop of temperatur­e – witnessed by the vitrified brain tissue – is a unique feature of the volcanic processes occurring during the eruption, as it could provide relevant informatio­n for possible interventi­ons by civil protection authoritie­s during the initial stages of a future eruption,” according to Petrone.

Vesuvius’ eruption covered Herculaneu­m in a toxic, metres-thick layer of volcanic ash, gases and lava flow which then turned to stone, encasing the city, allowing an extraordin­ary degree of frozen-in-time preservati­on both of city structures and of residents unable to flee.

As they investigat­ed the organic material turned up by the study, researcher­s managed to obtain unpreceden­ted high resolution imagery using scanning electron microscopy and advanced image processing tools.

With the post-eruption preservati­on locking in the cellular structure of the victim’s central nervous system, researcher­s have seized on the chance “to study possibly the best known example in archaeolog­y of extraordin­arily well-preserved human neuronal tissue from the brain and spinal cord,” PLOS One noted.

 ?? Photograph: University Roma Tre/AFP/Getty Images ?? The heat and sudden cooling that followed the eruption turned the brain material into a glassy material.
Photograph: University Roma Tre/AFP/Getty Images The heat and sudden cooling that followed the eruption turned the brain material into a glassy material.

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