Thursday 7 November 2024
365
days since we departed Cairns today. It seems like a fast year over four
seasons. Today was also another warm, sunny day. I’m not sure what this will
mean for the coming European summer, with the floods and such. Plus, what will
the Trump win mean?
Today
we caught the train to Pompeii to do a guided tour of Pompeii and Herculaneum
with an archaeologist guide. Very scientific of us. Not just a guide, but a
real archaeologist!
There
were 20 in the group, mostly Americans. And the cruise ship mob were there as
well – mostly Americans too. Our guide was, according to Lady P, a bit of a
hunk. He also spoke heavily accented English ten to the dozen, which meant you got
brain strain trying to pay attention to the excellent content he was
delivering. Nonetheless, the Pompeii tour was excellent – again without the
summer crowds. A break for lunch before the bus to Herculaneum.
Both
cities were covered in 15 metres of volcanic ash and mud, killing all living
creatures in hours and preserving the city and inhabitants in concrete toumbs.
The excavation of the cities is on a grand scale. In the case of Pompeii, most of
the commercial, residential and political areas; and in Herculaneum, a small part
of the wealthy residential area; some shops and the brothels.
The
excavations have exposed bodies, mosaic floors and walls, frescoes and bits and
pieces of ordinary life in the first century after Jesus. There’s no woke BCE
or post ME bullshit here. It’s either before Jesus or after Jesus.
To
give an idea of the task of exposing and preserving the buried cities, consider
this. The archaeological site at Herculaneum is about 20 hectares. That’s about
200 large suburban house blocks in Australia. So, imagine a single house block
filled with concrete to a height of 15 metres. That’s a big chunk of concrete. Well,
that’s what Vesuvius did to Herculaneum. Buried it in volcanic mud, which fills
every cavity and sets hard as concrete. Now start trying to expose the buried
house with a hand pick. Then with a paint brush when you find a piece of art
work or a skeleton. Anyone who has tried to break up concrete knows how
difficult this is! Well they have, over the past 300 years, managed to expose
the 20 hectares with amazing detail. An incredible, if not exhausting 5 hours
of archaeological education.
They didn't make it.
Roman columns before the concrete stucco is applied.
Almost a million little glass beads in this fresco. Luckily it only took 7 slaves one year to complete.
They smoke a lot in Italy
That would be uncomfortable having every cavity filled with volcanic mud.
ReplyDeleteIndeed. There must be another "N" I thought Naples was a cultural icon!
ReplyDelete