The Guardian (USA)

Vesuvius killed people of Pompeii in 15 minutes, study suggests

- Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo

A giant cloud of ash and gases released by Vesuvius in 79 AD took about 15 minutes to kill the inhabitant­s of Pompeii, research suggests.

The estimated 2,000 people who died in the ancient Roman city when they could not escape were not overwhelme­d by the lava, but rather asphyxiate­d by the gases and ashes and later covered in volcanic debris to leave a mark of their physical presence millennia later.

The study by researcher­s from the Department of Earth and Geo-environmen­tal Sciences of the University of Bari, in collaborat­ion with the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanolog­y (INGV) and the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh, has revealed the duration of the so-called pyroclasti­c flow, a dense, fast-moving flow of solidified lava pieces, volcanic ash and hot gases that hit the ancient Roman city minutes after the volcano erupted.

The lethal cloud had “a temperatur­e of over 100 degrees and was composed of CO2, chlorides, particles of incandesce­nt ash and volcanic glass”, said Roberto Isaia, senior researcher of the Vesuvius Observator­y of the INGV. “The aim of the work was to develop a model to try to understand and quantify the impact of pyroclasti­c flows on the inhabited area of Pompeii, about 10km [6 miles] from Vesuvius,” he added.

The study confirms that the inhabitant­s had no escape, and most of those who died suffocated in their homes and beds, or in the streets and squares of the city. Isaia’s model estimates the gases, ash and volcanic particles would have engulfed the city for between 10 and 20 minutes.

“It is probable that dozens of people died due to the rain of lapilli that fell

on Pompeii after the eruption, but most of them died of asphyxiati­on,” Isaia said, adding the pyroclasti­c flow would have reached Pompeii a few minutes after the explosion.

“Those 15 minutes inside that infernal cloud must have been interminab­le. The inhabitant­s could not have imagined what was happening. The Pompeiians lived with earthquake­s, but not with eruptions, so they were taken by surprise and swept away by that incandesce­nt cloud of ash.”

The INGV research described pyroclasti­c flows as “the most devastatin­g impact” of explosive eruptions. “Comparable to avalanches, they are generated by the collapse of the eruptive column. The resulting volcanic ashes run along the slopes of the volcano at speeds of hundreds of kilometres per hour, at high temperatur­es and with a high concentrat­ion of particles.”

Today, the ruins of Pompeii are Italy’s second-most visited archaeolog­ical site, after the Colosseum in Rome and, last year, attracted about a million tourists.

“It is very important to be able to reconstruc­t what happened during Vesuvius’s past eruptions, starting from the geological record, in order to trace the characteri­stics of the pyroclasti­c currents and the impact on population,” said Prof Pierfrance­sco Dellino of the University of Bari.

“The adopted scientific approach in this study reveals informatio­n that is contained in the pyroclasti­c deposits and that clarifies new aspects of the eruption of Pompeii and provides valuable insights for interpreti­ng the behaviour of Vesuvius, also in terms of civil protection.”

 ?? Photograph: Cesare Abbate/ EPA ?? The peak of Mount Vesuvius is seen from the streets of the archaeolog­ical site in Pompeii, Italy, in February.
Photograph: Cesare Abbate/ EPA The peak of Mount Vesuvius is seen from the streets of the archaeolog­ical site in Pompeii, Italy, in February.

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