![]() Storage Jar with Sisyphus and the Uninitiated, about 525 BC | Orpheus emerges as a central figure. Orpheus traveled to the underworld to retrieve his wife, Eurydice. The quest did not turn out well for Orpheus, but he returned from the Underworld, a feat that made him a hero of the afterlife.![]() | ![]() Weeping Siren, about 350 - 325 B.C. |
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Wednesday, October 31, 2018
'Underworld' at the Getty Villa
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
The Werewolf
![]() | Belief in werewolves developed in parallel to the belief in witches. Most modern fiction describes werewolves as vulnerable to silver and highly resistant to injury. These features appeared in German folklore of the 19th century. |
Monday, October 29, 2018
Roman Concrete
![]() | Roman concrete, also called opus caementicium, was a material used in construction during the late Roman Republic until the fading of the Roman Empire. Roman concrete was based on a hydraulic-setting cement. Two thousand years ago, Roman builders constructed vast seawalls and harbour piers. The concrete they used outlasted the empire. Half-sunken structures off the Italian coast might not sound impressive but the marvel is in the material. | The harbour concrete, a mixture of volcanic ash and quicklime, has withstood the sea for two millennia and counting. It is even stronger than when it was first mixed. |
![]() | Scientists subjected the concrete samples to a battery of advanced imaging techniques and spectroscopic tests. The tests revealed a rare chemical reaction, with aluminous tobermorite crystals growing out of another mineral called phillipsite. The key ingredient proved to be seawater. As seawater percolated within the tiny cracks in the Roman concrete it reacted with the phillipsite naturally found in the volcanic rock and created the tobermorite crystals. | ![]() Microscopic image shows the lumpy calcium-aluminum-silicate-hydrate (C-A-S-H) binder material that forms when volcanic ash, lime, and seawater mix. |
![]() Caesarea Concrete Bath | The Romans mined a specific type of volcanic ash from a quarry in Italy. Modern seawalls require steel reinforcement. The Romans didn’t use steel. Their reactive concrete was more than strong enough on its own. | ![]() |
Saturday, October 27, 2018
Ancient gold Discovered on Danish Island
Friday, October 26, 2018
The Boscoreale Treasure
Thursday, October 25, 2018
Golden treasure exposed due to low level of Danube River
![]() | Due to the record low level of the Danube River, a treasure trove has been exposed, including hundreds of gold and silver coins and ancient weapons. | ![]() |
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Theater of ancient Metropolis - The Griffin
The Griffin
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Ancient Greek vessel is the World’s oldest intact shipwreck
Monday, October 22, 2018
Graffiti changes the history of Pompeii
![]() | Other discoveries were made in the Regio V area of the site — mosaics and frescoes.![]() | ![]() |
Saturday, October 20, 2018
Lunar Meteorite brings $ 612k
| A 12-pound (5.5 kilogram) meteorite discovered in Northwest Africa in 2017 has been sold at auction for US$612,500. Boston-based RR Auction announced the winning bid for the meteorite, composed of six fragments that fit together like a puzzle. It is considered one of the most significant lunar meteorites ever found because of its large size and because it has “partial fusion crust” caused by the tremendous heat that sears the rock as it falls to Earth. |
Jurassic-era piranha is world's earliest flesh-eating fish
![]() | The creature, found in South Germany, lived about 150 million years ago and had the distinctive teeth of modern-day piranhas. The Jurassic marauders used their razor teeth to tear chunks of flesh and fins off other fish ... a renewable resource as the fins grew back. | ![]() |
Friday, October 19, 2018
Gold from the Pulaski
![]() ![]() | A stash of gold coins found in January is the latest piece of evidence that a shipwreck 40-plus miles off the North Carolina coast is that of the steamship Pulaski, which exploded and took half its wealthy passengers to the bottom of the Atlantic in 1838. Divers found 14 gold coins and 24 silver coins in a spot “no bigger than a cigar box.” All predate the ship’s sinking. Those involved have one particular passenger in mind: Charles Ridge, a man who survived but lost $20,000 in the disaster, all of it in gold coins. So far, divers have found 51 U.S., Spanish and Mexican coins during a half dozen visits. |
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The harbour concrete, a mixture of volcanic ash and quicklime, has withstood the sea for two millennia and counting. It is even stronger than when it was first mixed.




















A sculptor reproduced the seat with the griffin and the replica was installed in its original place in the theater.
Since antiquity, Griffins were known for guarding treasure and priceless possessions. In Greek and Roman texts, griffins were associated with gold.



Researchers believe the graffiti was jotted down just a few days before Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD— but in October, instead of August as believed.









