The Romans occupied what's now Spain from 218 B.C. until roughly the fourth century A.D. The fortress burial included a " pugio " — the standard dagger of the Roman army — that suggests the dead man ...
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNVesuvius Turned a Roman Man's Brain Into Glass. Now, Scientists Reveal How the Extremely Rare Preservation HappenedIn 79 C.E., Mount Vesuvius erupted, burying the nearby ancient Roman city of Pompeii and the smaller town of Herculaneum under deadly layers of volcanic ash, pumice and pyroclastic flows. But the ...
Like its more famous neighbor, Pompeii, this ancient Roman town was destroyed ... A piece of the glass fossil from the Roman man's brain. A piece of the glass fossil from the Roman man's brain.
It holds your hands through the foundation of Rome, with excessive concern dedicated to the Aeneid, to the rise of the ...
The remains of a young man, found in his bed in the destroyed ... Pier Paolo Petrone In 79 C.E., Mount Vesuvius erupted, burying the nearby ancient Roman city of Pompeii and the smaller town ...
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5,000-year-old fortress found in Spain contains mysterious burial of Roman-era man with daggerArchaeologists excavating an almost 5,000-year-old Spanish fortress were surprised to find a burial from a much more recent era: a man from ancient Rome who was buried with a military dagger.
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