k Restoration of Roman bronze box from Pompeii Restoration of Roman bronze box from Pompeii. Restorer working on a Roman bronze box excavated in 1829 from the Villa del Tritone in the ruins of Pompeii on the shores of the Bay of Naples, Italy. Pompeii was a Roman town destroyed by the eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The eruption buried the town under a thick layer of ash, and it remained undiscovered until 1599. It was not until 1749 that attempts were made to excavate the town which has been very well preserved in the ash. The excavations revealed a huge amount about daily life at the time. The entire site is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed in 2017, at the National Archaeological Museum of Naples. Photo by MARCO ANSALONI SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Restoration of Roman bronze box from Pompeii Restoration of Roman bronze box from Pompeii. Restorer working on a Roman bronze box excavated in 1829 from the Villa del Tritone in the ruins of Pompeii on the shores of the Bay of Naples, Italy. Pompeii was a Roman town destroyed by the eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The eruption buried the town under a thick layer of ash, and it remained undiscovered until 1599. It was not until 1749 that attempts were made to excavate the town which has been very well preserved in the ash. The excavations revealed a huge amount about daily life at the time. The entire site is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed in 2017, at the National Archaeological Museum of Naples. Photo by MARCO ANSALONI   SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
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Restoration of Roman bronze box from Pompeii

Restoration of Roman bronze box from Pompeii. Restorer working on a Roman bronze box excavated in 1829 from the Villa del Tritone in the ruins of Pompeii on the shores of the Bay of Naples, Italy. Pompeii was a Roman town destroyed by the eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The eruption buried the town under a thick layer of ash, and it remained undiscovered until 1599. It was not until 1749 that attempts were made to excavate the town which has been very well preserved in the ash. The excavations revealed a huge amount about daily life at the time. The entire site is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photographed in 2017, at the National Archaeological Museum of Naples. Photo by MARCO ANSALONI / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

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