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Bodies Bodies Bodies' - Movie Cast Interview - MSNAmandla Stenberg, Lee Pace, Maria Bakalova, Rachel Sennott, Myha'la Herrold and Chase Sui Wonders talk A24’s “Bodies Bodies Bodies.” They discuss the film’s smart dialogue, uniquely ...
DNA shows Pompeii’s dead aren’t who we thought they were Integrating genetic data with historic and archaeological data can enrich or correct popular narratives.
Four new bodies have been discovered at Pompeii. A unique archaeological find in their house illuminated their final moments.
Editor’s note: this article includes a photograph of a plaster cast of a person who died at Pompeii. Bits of human bone recovered from Pompeii, Italy, have yielded DNA from people who died ...
St. Louis Science Center Special Exhibitions Manager Kaylia Eskew shared what to expect artifacts and experience to expect from the Pompeii exhibit opening on May 16, 2025. Video by Allie ...
New Pompeii discovery reveals the tragic true extent of human suffering A chilling new discovery at the site of Pompeii reveals the tragic true extent of human suffering 2000 years after the disaster.
Several horses recently discovered in a 2,000-year-old stable appear frozen in a failed flight to safety from the eruption of Vesuvius.
The Buried City: Unearthing the Real Pompeii (2025) by Gabriel Zuchtriegel is published by the University of Chicago Press and is available online and through independent booksellers.
The plaster-cast bodies of the victims are the most vivid shocking reminders of the horrific event that made Pompeii famous, but who were these men, women and children so cruelly frozen in time?
Archaeologists in Pompeii have unearthed a home containing the skeletal remains of a family of four, shedding light on the final moments of the ancient civilization.
Picture: Supplied The cast bodies of a 40-year-old master and his young slave. Picture: Handout / POMPEII ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK / AFP Both buildings were being renovated at the time of the eruption.
New Pompeii discovery reveals the tragic true extent of human suffering A chilling new discovery at the site of Pompeii reveals the tragic true extent of human suffering 2000 years after the disaster.
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