Two male skeletons showed signs of severe fracture and trauma injuries.
Archaeologists have hotly debated the precise cause of death of those who perished in Pompeii when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 CE. Did they die of asphyxiation, from the extreme heat, or from a combination of factors? A new paper published in the journal Frontiers in Earth Science examines the complicating effects of earthquakes that occurred just prior to and concurrently with the eruption. Of most interest was the discovery of two skeletons of people who likely died when their shelter collapsed around them, weakened by the seismic tremors.
2 men survived the initial eruption, avoided being killed by the toxic gases, found shelter in a basement but were finally killed when the walls collapsed on then.