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This Ancient Mosaic Depicts a Thrilling Chariot Race
 
"Excavation and restoration work on a rare Roman piece in Cyprus provides a fresh look at historic customs."
 
By Casey Smith
 
PUBLISHED AUGUST 3, 2017

"After years of excavating, archaeologists in Cyprus have uncovered a rare, Roman-era floor mosaic almost 2,000 years old.
 
Scenes of chariot races in a Roman hippodrome, an open-air stadium for horse racing, span across the 85-foot long mosaic. The illustrations are accompanied by inscriptions in ancient Greek, indicating the names of the horses and their riders."

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Ancient Greek Papyri Virtually Unwrapped in Italy (video)
 
TornosNews.gr 09.08.2017 | 19:03
 
"Scientists in Italy continue – with new methods of modern digital technology – the virtual unwrapping and reading of the ancient papyri of Heraklion (Herculaneum) in Campania and, as they announced, made new progress in their very difficult work.

The Herculaneum scrolls, many of which concern works by Greek philosophers, were discovered in 1752-54 in archaeological excavations in the so-called Villa of the Papyri in Heraklion (Ercolano in Italian) of Campania in Italy near Pompeii. The villa was destroyed and buried in the ashes after the devastating eruption of Vesuvius, the nearby volcano, in 79 AD."

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PUBLIC RELEASE: 17-AUG-2017

 

Poisonings Went Hand in Hand with the Drinking Water in Pompeii

 

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK

 

"The ancient Romans were famous for their advanced water supply. But the drinking water in the pipelines was probably poisoned on a scale that may have led to daily problems with vomiting, diarrhoea, and liver and kidney damage. This is the finding of analyses of water pipe from Pompeii."

 


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By Lulu Morris 24 August 2017
 
What Would Pompeii be like if Vesuvius Never Erupted?
 
"A whole city wiped out in a matter of days."
 
"When you think of Pompeii, you think of the massive eruption in 79 CE and subsequent mass killing of the Romans who inhabited Pompeii and Herculaneum. You may picture the eerie casts that lay around the streets of Pompeii and the faces of those who perished in the fires of Vesuvius.

But what if Vesuvius had never erupted?"
 
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Archaeologists Uncover Rare 2,000-Year-Old Sundial During Roman Theatre Excavation

 

November 8, 2017

 


"A 2,000-year-old intact and inscribed sundial – one of only a handful known to have survived – has been recovered during the excavation of a roofed theatre in the Roman town of Interamna Lirenas, near Monte Cassino, in Italy." 

 


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'Hadrian's Pier' Emerges from the Sea at Lecce

 

12/06/2017 10:00:00 PM

 

"Roman history has emerged from the sea of Salento. In San Cataldo, a few kilometers from Lecce: 'Hadrian's Pier', so named in homage to the Emperor who ordered its reconstruction, is revealed by the aerial shots of Emiliano Peluso."

 


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Unearthed in Rome’s New Subway: Extinct Elephants and Persian Peach Pits

 

By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO

 

DEC. 18, 2017

 

ROME — "The ancient Romans were celebrated for their engineering feats: roads that helped expand an empire; aqueducts that quenched throngs and supplied lavish fountains; monumental bridges, some of which are still in use today."

 


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This Roman ‘Gate to Hell’ Killed its Victims with a Cloud of Deadly Carbon Dioxide

 

By Colin Barras

 

Feb. 16, 2018 , 8:00 AM

 

"Is it possible to walk through the gates of hell and live? The Romans thought so, and they staged elaborate sacrifices at what they believed were entrances to the underworld scattered across the ancient Mediterranean. The sacrifices—healthy bulls led down to the gates of hell—died quickly without human intervention, but the castrated priests who accompanied them returned unharmed. Now, a new study of one ancient site suggests that these “miracles” may have a simple geological explanation."

 


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