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A mother shielding her child.
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Two sisters locked in a final embrace. A
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family huddled beneath a staircase. For
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over 150 years, historians believed
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these were Pompeii's most heartbreaking
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August 25th, 79 CE, a surge of ash and
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superheated gas swept down from Mount
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Vesuvius, engulfing Pompeii with
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temperatures soaring as high as 500°
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Within moments, the city's streets,
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homes, and those who remained were
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sealed beneath a dense suffocating
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blanket of volcanic debris.
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The first layer of pumice and ash fell
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overnight, but it was the final
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pyroclastic flows, fast, lethal, and
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inescapable, which left the city buried.
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Under this weight, bodies were entombed
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in a matrix of fine ash, cut off from
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Over days and weeks, soft tissues
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vanished, consumed by bacteria and heat,
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while the surrounding ash hardened into
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What remained were hollow spaces, exact
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imprints of the dead, preserved in the
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shape of outstretched arms, curled
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fingers, and collapsed forms.
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These void, airtight, and undisturbed
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spaces later held the last traces of
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bone, hidden for centuries.
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The disaster's violence and the precise
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chemistry of volcanic ash created a rare
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archaeological window.
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Not fossilized bodies, but negative
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molds. Each a moment of human life
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stopped in time, waiting for discovery.
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In 1863, Giuseppe Fiorelli stood over a
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patch of hardened ash in Pompeii and saw
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not just destruction, but possibility.
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He noticed that beneath the surface, the
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volcanic debris sometimes hid hollow
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spaces, the exact shapes left by bodies
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lost to the eruption centuries before.
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Instead of removing what little bone
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remained, Fiorelli devised a radical
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method. He poured liquid plaster into
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those voids, letting it seep into every
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Hours later, the hardened shell was
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carefully chipped free.
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Where there had been emptiness, there
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now stood a haunting figure, the first
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cast known to early excavators as the
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Lady of the Vesuvius.
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For the first time, the dead of Pompeii
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were given form, their final moments
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made visible in plaster.
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Fiorelli's technique transformed
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accidental cavities into study objects,
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turning absence into presence.
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His method set a precedent for
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generations of archaeologists, inviting
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both scientific scrutiny and human
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empathy. The casts became icons, but
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they were also artifacts shaped by the
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choices and assumptions of those who
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Today, these figures are not just relics
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of tragedy. They are clues waiting for
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modern science [music] to ask new
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Rows of plaster figures, silent for
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centuries, became the focus of a new
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kind of investigation. Instead of
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chisels and brushes, researchers brought
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in a Siemens Somatom definition flash CT
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scanner. 128 slices, 0.25 mm voxels.
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>> Each scan revealed what the human eye
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could never see. 30 casts were selected
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from the cataloged 104, chosen for their
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preservation and the hints of bone
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glimpsed through cracks and restoration
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The scanner's field of view, 180
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mm, captured entire torsos in a single
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>> mapping bone, plaster, and void with
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Where the 19th century eye saw only
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shape, the CT revealed fragments,
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vertebrae, phalanges, rib shards, each
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sealed in plaster since Fiorelli's first
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14 casts, the ones with the clearest
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bone on imaging, underwent sampling.
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Technicians drilled cores just 2 mm
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wide, thinner than a pencil, through
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never breaking the cast's outline.
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Each powder sample was sealed, logged,
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and transferred by gloved hands into a
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clean room, where every tool was
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sterilized and every surface
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Chain of custody protocols tracked every
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movement, from the moment the drill
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touched plaster to the instant the DNA
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entered the sequencer.
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Out of these, five yielded DNA strong
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enough for a full genome.
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The process was slow,
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>> exacting, and left no room for error.
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For 150 years, the casts were seen as
5:18
The CT and DNA proved otherwise. Inside,
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the dead of Pompeii had left more than
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just their shapes. They had left
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fragments of their identity waiting for
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For 150 years, historians believed the
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adult in the House of the Golden
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Bracelet cast was a mother who died
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shielding her child. The gold cuff on
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her wrist, a symbol of maternal care.
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DNA says otherwise. Genetic analysis
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identified the adult as male with XY
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chromosomes, not female, while the child
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beside him was unrelated.
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In ancient Rome, gold jewelry was not
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High-status men often wore ornate
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bracelets, rings, and pins, a fact lost
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[music] beneath layers of modern
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The embrace in the cryptoporticus,
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long described as two sisters or a
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mother and daughter locked in their
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final moment, also unravels under
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DNA reveals one individual is male, the
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other female, with no biological
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The relationship, if any, is unknown.
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The intimacy of their pose, once read as
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familial love, may simply be the result
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of catastrophe, a chance proximity in a
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Beneath the staircase, four bodies
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huddled together were for decades
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presented as a nuclear family. DNA says
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otherwise. No pair among them shares
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close [music] genetic ties. Each man
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carried distinct ancestry markers.
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Their only bond, the disaster that
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sealed them together.
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These reversals are not just scientific
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corrections. They reveal how easily
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modern eyes, searching for familiar
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stories, can misread the past. The casts
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are not silent witnesses to family
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tragedy. They are evidence of a city
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shaped by migration, trade, and the
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unpredictable violence of history.
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Pompeii's story is still being
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rewritten, each discovery peeling back
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another layer of assumptions.
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Principal component analysis of the
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recovered genomes placed Pompeii's
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victims not among local Italic clusters,
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but closest to ancient groups from the
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Levant, Egypt, Greece,
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and North Africa. For 150 years,
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historians believed these plaster casts
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captured a closed, insular Roman town.
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The DNA says otherwise. Nearly 70% of
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the ancestry in the sampled individuals
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traces to Eastern Mediterranean
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populations, with only a minority
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reflecting Italian roots.
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This genetic mosaic matches the city's
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material record. A glass vessel
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unearthed in a neighborhood thermopolium
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was chemically traced to workshops in
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Alexandria, Egypt, evidence of trade
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routes that stretched across the empire.
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Pompeii was not a static provincial
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outpost, but a crossroads of migration,
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commerce, and cultural exchange.
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The story written in bone and glass
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reveals a city far more diverse than the
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family portraits imagined by earlier
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And every new discovery continues to
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Gabriel Zuchtriegel, director of the
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archaeological park, insists that no
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restoration or sampling occurs without
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joint approval from scientific and
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heritage authorities.
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Of the 105 original casts,
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86 have now been stabilized and
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preserved under [music] these strict
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protocols. New fieldwork continues to
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reshape what is known.
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A Dionysian banquet freeze surfaced in a
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2025 excavation. A private bathhouse
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complex was uncovered in the Eastern
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Quarter, and a marble relief appeared at
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Each discovery arrives within a
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framework that balances scientific
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ambition with respect for the dead,
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ensuring that every advance is carefully
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weighed, documented, and shared.
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Pompeii remains a living site, its story
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expanding with every layer revealed.
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For 150 years, historians believed the
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casts told simple tragic stories. The
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DNA says otherwise. Pompeii's dead were
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strangers, migrants, and enslaved, far
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more complex than our modern eyes
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imagined. Discovery continues.