The AD 79 Vesuvius eruption buried the Roman towns around the volcano under several metres of pyroclastic materials. The destruction of these Roman towns allows volcanologists to build models that can provide valuable information on the extent and type of damage that a future Plinian eruption could cause in urbanized areas. In order to fully understand these phenomena, volcanologists need to observe the sequence of volcanic layers (stratigraphic reconstruction) that buried the city during the AD 79 eruption and which of these layers are associated with damage and victims. This study reports the results of a collaboration between the Archaeological Park of Pompeii and the University of Naples Federico II to document the stratigraphic sequenc...
During the AD 79 eruption of Vesuvius, Italy, the Roman town of Pompeii, was covered by 2.5 m fallou...
During the past 22 ka of activity at Somma– Vesuvius, catastrophic pyroclastic density currents (PDC...
S03.06 - Volcanoes and Human History Recent excavations at Pompeii: new findings and their volcanol...
Plinian eruptions are powerful explosive volcanic events that impact large areas with cubic kilomete...
The AD 79 Vesuvius eruption destroyed the famous towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum located 5 and 10 k...
A huge excavation project is in progress at Pompeii since the last year, it will lead to the exhibit...
Plinian eruptions are highly energetic events that release cubic kilometres of magma in the form of ...
A quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the damage caused by the products of explosive eruption...
S03.06 - Volcanoes and Human History Lateral facies variations in the 79 AD deposits at Pompeii An...
To assess ways in which the products of explosive eruptions interact with human settlements we perfo...
To assess ways in which the products of explosive eruptions interact with human settlements, we perf...
Detailed descriptions of the effects of explosive eruptions on urban settlements available to volcan...
Detailed descriptions of the effects of explosive eruptions on urban settlements available to volcan...
During the A.D. 79 eruption of Vesuvius, Italy, the Roman town of Pompeii was covered by 2.5 m of py...
Integrating field observations and rock-magnetic measurements, we report how a turbulent pyroclastic...
During the AD 79 eruption of Vesuvius, Italy, the Roman town of Pompeii, was covered by 2.5 m fallou...
During the past 22 ka of activity at Somma– Vesuvius, catastrophic pyroclastic density currents (PDC...
S03.06 - Volcanoes and Human History Recent excavations at Pompeii: new findings and their volcanol...
Plinian eruptions are powerful explosive volcanic events that impact large areas with cubic kilomete...
The AD 79 Vesuvius eruption destroyed the famous towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum located 5 and 10 k...
A huge excavation project is in progress at Pompeii since the last year, it will lead to the exhibit...
Plinian eruptions are highly energetic events that release cubic kilometres of magma in the form of ...
A quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the damage caused by the products of explosive eruption...
S03.06 - Volcanoes and Human History Lateral facies variations in the 79 AD deposits at Pompeii An...
To assess ways in which the products of explosive eruptions interact with human settlements we perfo...
To assess ways in which the products of explosive eruptions interact with human settlements, we perf...
Detailed descriptions of the effects of explosive eruptions on urban settlements available to volcan...
Detailed descriptions of the effects of explosive eruptions on urban settlements available to volcan...
During the A.D. 79 eruption of Vesuvius, Italy, the Roman town of Pompeii was covered by 2.5 m of py...
Integrating field observations and rock-magnetic measurements, we report how a turbulent pyroclastic...
During the AD 79 eruption of Vesuvius, Italy, the Roman town of Pompeii, was covered by 2.5 m fallou...
During the past 22 ka of activity at Somma– Vesuvius, catastrophic pyroclastic density currents (PDC...
S03.06 - Volcanoes and Human History Recent excavations at Pompeii: new findings and their volcanol...