1. Heat-Induced Brain Vitrification from the Vesuvius Eruption in c.e. 79
- Author
-
Francesco Sirano, Piero Pucci, Guido Giordano, Peter J. Baxter, Massimo Niola, Carolina Fontanarosa, Vincenzo Graziano, Pierpaolo Petrone, Angela Amoresano, Petrone, PIETRO PAOLO, Pucci, Pietro, Niola, Massimo, Baxter, Peter J., Fontanarosa, Carolina, Giordano, Guido, Graziano, Vincenzo, Sirano, Francesco, Amoresano, Angela, Petrone, P., Pucci, P., Niola, M., Baxter, P. J., Fontanarosa, C., Giordano, G., Graziano, V., Sirano, F., and Amoresano, A.
- Subjects
Male ,Heat induced ,Hot Temperature ,Brain chemistry ,Brain tissue ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Extreme heat ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Vitrification ,030212 general & internal medicine ,History, Ancient ,Brain Chemistry ,business.industry ,Skull ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Volcanic Eruption ,Archaeology ,Italy ,Rapid rise ,Biophysics ,business ,Human - Abstract
Cerebral tissues in human remains are rare archaeological discoveries. These tissues are typically saponified, meaning that their triglycerides have been converted to glycerol and fatty acid salts, or soap. In c.e. 79, a volcanic hot ash avalanche rapidly killed the inhabitants of Pompeii and Herculaneum. In the 1960s, at the Collegium Augustalium in Herculaneum, a human victim of the avalanche was found lying on a wooden bed, buried by volcanic ash. In this victim’s skull, we discovered apparent brain remains that were vitrified instead of saponified.
- Published
- 2020