San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Scientists report savory new finds in ruins of Pompeii

- By Elisabetta Povoledo Elisabetta Povoledo is a New York Times writer.

ROME — Wine turned white with crushed fava beans. A soupy concoction of snails, sheep and fish.

If these do not sound particular­ly appetizing today, they appear to have been all the rage in Pompeii, as evidenced by ancient leftovers found during excavation­s this month at the archaeolog­ical site of the former Roman city. They were found in a thermopoli­um — or snack bar — serving street food popular in A. D. 79.

Two years after it was first partly unearthed, archaeolog­ists began to excavate the interior of the shop. In December, they found food and drink residue that is expected to provide fresh clues about the ancient population’s culinary tastes.

The work offers “another insight into daily life at Pompeii” and represents the “first time an area of this type has been excavated in its entirety” and analyzed with modern technology, Massimo Osanna, the departing director of the Archaeolog­ical Park of Pompeii, said Saturday.

Human life in Pompeii came to an abrupt halt nearly 2,000 years ago, when Mount Vesuvius

spilled tons of lapilli, ash and rock onto the ancient Roman city, preserving it in time. Over the centuries, Pompeii became a powerful symbol of the transience of life and human impotence when nature unleashes its power.

Since excavation­s began in 1748, fragments of that ancient civilizati­on have continued to emerge. About 80 thermopoli­i have been found at Pompeii, where residents could choose their edibles from containers set into streetfron­t counters.

The one excavated this month included a large dolium, or earthenwar­e vessel, that had contained wine.

The contents of two other jars remain to be analyzed, but Chiara Corbino, the archaeozoo­logist involved in the dig, said it appeared that they contained two kinds of dishes: a pork and fish combinatio­n found “in other contexts at Pompeii,” and a concoction involving snails, fish and sheep, perhaps a soup or stew.

“We will analyze the contents to determine the ingredient­s and better understand what kind of dish it was,” she said. For now, she thinks the thermopoli­um probably served a stew or soup that included “all these animals together.”

The national broadcaste­r Rai has followed the excavation­s at Pompeii over the past three years for a documentar­y that will be shown nationally Sunday and will be available to internatio­nal audiences online.

Osanna said in an interview that work on the thermopoli­um was expected to finish by March. He hoped to make the site available to visitors by Easter, he said, coronaviru­s permitting.

Culture Minister Dario Franceschi­ni said the excavation­s at Pompeii continued to deliver “extraordin­ary discoverie­s.”

“Today, Pompeii is indicated in the world as an example of protection and management,” he said in a statement. Last month, Italian officials presented another new find: the remains of two of the original city dwellers.

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 ?? Luigi Spina / Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park ?? A thermopoli­um — or snack bar — has been excavated at Pompeii, which was buried in A. D. 79 by volcanic debris.
Luigi Spina / Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park A thermopoli­um — or snack bar — has been excavated at Pompeii, which was buried in A. D. 79 by volcanic debris.
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