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Scientists Were WRONG About Pompeii | Here's What The DNA Shows

10:141,214 words · ~6 min readEnglishTranscribed Apr 28, 2026
AI Summary

Modern DNA sequencing and CT scanning have debunked 150 years of historical assumptions about the victims of Pompeii, revealing that famous 'families' were often unrelated and the city was a diverse hub of Eastern Mediterranean migrants.

This case study demonstrates how modern forensic technology can overturn long-standing historical narratives and reveals the Roman Empire as a surprisingly globalized and genetically diverse society.

Section summaries

0:00-2:00

The Eruption and Cast Formation

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General historical background on Vesuvius and the chemical process of how the 'negative molds' were created.

2:00-3:00

Fiorelli's Plaster Method

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Explains the specific 1863 technique that created the casts, which is essential to understanding why DNA was preserved inside.

3:00-5:00

CT Scanning and DNA Extraction

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Technical detail on how the team used 128-slice CT scanners and micro-drills to sample the remains without destroying them.

5:00-7:00

Correcting the Historical Narratives

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Crucial segment revealing that the 'Mother,' 'Sisters,' and 'Families' were actually unrelated individuals and men.

7:00-10:00

Ancestry Analysis and Current Excavations

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Details the genetic links to the Middle East/North Africa and mentions new 2025 archaeological finds.

Key points

  • Debunking the 'Maternal' Narratives — Long-held assumptions about specific victims—such as a 'mother' shielding her child—were proven wrong; DNA analysis showed the adult was male and the child was genetically unrelated.
  • Advanced Forensic Methodology — Researchers used Siemens Somatom CT scanners (128 slices) to map bone fragments inside plaster casts and extracted DNA using 2mm micro-drills through existing cracks.
  • The Genetic Mosaic of Pompeii — Principal component analysis (PCA) of the victims' genomes clustered them with populations from the Levant, Egypt, and North Africa rather than local Italian groups.
In ancient Rome, gold jewelry was not reserved for women. High-status men often wore ornate bracelets, rings, and pins, a fact lost beneath layers of modern storytelling. Narrator
The DNA says otherwise. Nearly 70% of the ancestry in the sampled individuals traces to Eastern Mediterranean populations. Narrator

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

A mother shielding her child.

0:02

Two sisters locked in a final embrace. A

0:05

family huddled beneath a staircase. For

0:08

over 150 years, historians believed

0:12

these were Pompeii's most heartbreaking

0:14

stories.

0:16

DNA says otherwise.

0:19

On the morning of

0:20

August 25th, 79 CE, a surge of ash and

0:25

superheated gas swept down from Mount

0:28

Vesuvius, engulfing Pompeii with

0:31

temperatures soaring as high as 500°

0:34

C.

0:35

Within moments, the city's streets,

0:38

homes, and those who remained were

0:40

sealed beneath a dense suffocating

0:42

blanket of volcanic debris.

0:44

The first layer of pumice and ash fell

0:47

overnight, but it was the final

0:49

pyroclastic flows, fast, lethal, and

0:53

inescapable, which left the city buried.

0:57

Under this weight, bodies were entombed

0:59

in a matrix of fine ash, cut off from

1:02

air and moisture.

1:04

Over days and weeks, soft tissues

1:07

vanished, consumed by bacteria and heat,

1:10

while the surrounding ash hardened into

1:13

a porous shell.

1:15

What remained were hollow spaces, exact

1:18

imprints of the dead, preserved in the

1:20

shape of outstretched arms, curled

1:23

fingers, and collapsed forms.

1:26

These void, airtight, and undisturbed

1:29

spaces later held the last traces of

1:32

bone, hidden for centuries.

1:35

The disaster's violence and the precise

1:37

chemistry of volcanic ash created a rare

1:40

archaeological window.

1:42

Not fossilized bodies, but negative

1:45

molds. Each a moment of human life

1:48

stopped in time, waiting for discovery.

1:53

In 1863, Giuseppe Fiorelli stood over a

1:56

patch of hardened ash in Pompeii and saw

1:59

not just destruction, but possibility.

2:02

He noticed that beneath the surface, the

2:04

volcanic debris sometimes hid hollow

2:07

spaces, the exact shapes left by bodies

2:10

lost to the eruption centuries before.

2:13

Instead of removing what little bone

2:15

remained, Fiorelli devised a radical

2:18

method. He poured liquid plaster into

2:21

those voids, letting it seep into every

2:23

contour.

2:25

Hours later, the hardened shell was

2:28

carefully chipped free.

2:30

Where there had been emptiness, there

2:32

now stood a haunting figure, the first

2:35

cast known to early excavators as the

2:38

Lady of the Vesuvius.

2:40

For the first time, the dead of Pompeii

2:43

were given form, their final moments

2:46

made visible in plaster.

2:48

Fiorelli's technique transformed

2:51

accidental cavities into study objects,

2:54

turning absence into presence.

2:58

His method set a precedent for

3:00

generations of archaeologists, inviting

3:02

both scientific scrutiny and human

3:05

empathy. The casts became icons, but

3:09

they were also artifacts shaped by the

3:11

choices and assumptions of those who

3:12

made them.

3:14

Today, these figures are not just relics

3:16

of tragedy. They are clues waiting for

3:18

modern science [music] to ask new

3:21

questions.

3:22

Rows of plaster figures, silent for

3:25

centuries, became the focus of a new

3:27

kind of investigation. Instead of

3:30

chisels and brushes, researchers brought

3:32

in a Siemens Somatom definition flash CT

3:36

scanner. 128 slices, 0.25 mm voxels.

3:42

>> [music]

3:42

>> Each scan revealed what the human eye

3:45

could never see. 30 casts were selected

3:48

from the cataloged 104, chosen for their

3:51

preservation and the hints of bone

3:53

glimpsed through cracks and restoration

3:55

scars.

3:56

The scanner's field of view, 180

4:01

mm, captured entire torsos in a single

4:04

pass,

4:04

>> [music]

4:05

>> mapping bone, plaster, and void with

4:08

forensic precision.

4:10

Where the 19th century eye saw only

4:13

shape, the CT revealed fragments,

4:16

vertebrae, phalanges, rib shards, each

4:20

sealed in plaster since Fiorelli's first

4:23

pour.

4:24

14 casts, the ones with the clearest

4:27

bone on imaging, underwent sampling.

4:29

Technicians drilled cores just 2 mm

4:33

wide, thinner than a pencil, through

4:35

pre-existing cracks,

4:37

never breaking the cast's outline.

4:40

Each powder sample was sealed, logged,

4:43

and transferred by gloved hands into a

4:45

clean room, where every tool was

4:48

sterilized and every surface

4:50

decontaminated.

4:52

Chain of custody protocols tracked every

4:55

movement, from the moment the drill

4:57

touched plaster to the instant the DNA

5:00

entered the sequencer.

5:02

Out of these, five yielded DNA strong

5:05

enough for a full genome.

5:08

The process was slow,

5:09

>> [music]

5:10

>> exacting, and left no room for error.

5:13

For 150 years, the casts were seen as

5:16

empty shells.

5:18

The CT and DNA proved otherwise. Inside,

5:22

the dead of Pompeii had left more than

5:24

just their shapes. They had left

5:26

fragments of their identity waiting for

5:28

science to speak.

5:31

For 150 years, historians believed the

5:35

adult in the House of the Golden

5:36

Bracelet cast was a mother who died

5:39

shielding her child. The gold cuff on

5:42

her wrist, a symbol of maternal care.

5:46

DNA says otherwise. Genetic analysis

5:50

identified the adult as male with XY

5:54

chromosomes, not female, while the child

5:57

beside him was unrelated.

5:59

In ancient Rome, gold jewelry was not

6:02

reserved for women.

6:04

High-status men often wore ornate

6:07

bracelets, rings, and pins, a fact lost

6:10

[music] beneath layers of modern

6:12

storytelling.

6:14

The embrace in the cryptoporticus,

6:17

long described as two sisters or a

6:19

mother and daughter locked in their

6:20

final moment, also unravels under

6:24

scrutiny.

6:25

DNA reveals one individual is male, the

6:29

other female, with no biological

6:31

kinship.

6:33

The relationship, if any, is unknown.

6:37

The intimacy of their pose, once read as

6:40

familial love, may simply be the result

6:43

of catastrophe, a chance proximity in a

6:47

collapsing world.

6:49

Beneath the staircase, four bodies

6:52

huddled together were for decades

6:53

presented as a nuclear family. DNA says

6:57

otherwise. No pair among them shares

7:00

close [music] genetic ties. Each man

7:02

carried distinct ancestry markers.

7:05

Their only bond, the disaster that

7:07

sealed them together.

7:09

These reversals are not just scientific

7:11

corrections. They reveal how easily

7:13

modern eyes, searching for familiar

7:15

stories, can misread the past. The casts

7:19

are not silent witnesses to family

7:21

tragedy. They are evidence of a city

7:24

shaped by migration, trade, and the

7:27

unpredictable violence of history.

7:30

Pompeii's story is still being

7:32

rewritten, each discovery peeling back

7:34

another layer of assumptions.

7:37

Principal component analysis of the

7:39

recovered genomes placed Pompeii's

7:42

victims not among local Italic clusters,

7:45

but closest to ancient groups from the

7:47

Levant, Egypt, Greece,

7:51

and North Africa. For 150 years,

7:54

historians believed these plaster casts

7:57

captured a closed, insular Roman town.

8:00

The DNA says otherwise. Nearly 70% of

8:03

the ancestry in the sampled individuals

8:06

traces to Eastern Mediterranean

8:08

populations, with only a minority

8:10

reflecting Italian roots.

8:12

This genetic mosaic matches the city's

8:15

material record. A glass vessel

8:18

unearthed in a neighborhood thermopolium

8:21

was chemically traced to workshops in

8:23

Alexandria, Egypt, evidence of trade

8:27

routes that stretched across the empire.

8:30

Pompeii was not a static provincial

8:32

outpost, but a crossroads of migration,

8:35

commerce, and cultural exchange.

8:39

The story written in bone and glass

8:42

reveals a city far more diverse than the

8:45

family portraits imagined by earlier

8:47

generations.

8:49

And every new discovery continues to

8:51

widen its horizon.

8:54

Gabriel Zuchtriegel, director of the

8:57

archaeological park, insists that no

9:00

restoration or sampling occurs without

9:03

joint approval from scientific and

9:05

heritage authorities.

9:07

Of the 105 original casts,

9:11

86 have now been stabilized and

9:13

preserved under [music] these strict

9:15

protocols. New fieldwork continues to

9:18

reshape what is known.

9:20

A Dionysian banquet freeze surfaced in a

9:23

2025 excavation. A private bathhouse

9:28

complex was uncovered in the Eastern

9:30

Quarter, and a marble relief appeared at

9:33

Porta Salaria.

9:34

Each discovery arrives within a

9:36

framework that balances scientific

9:39

ambition with respect for the dead,

9:42

ensuring that every advance is carefully

9:44

weighed, documented, and shared.

9:48

Pompeii remains a living site, its story

9:52

expanding with every layer revealed.

9:55

For 150 years, historians believed the

9:58

casts told simple tragic stories. The

10:02

DNA says otherwise. Pompeii's dead were

10:05

strangers, migrants, and enslaved, far

10:08

more complex than our modern eyes

10:09

imagined. Discovery continues.

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