Historians assigned an account for a minute for the last moments of Pompeii-where the gas and ashes are locals into glass.
16,000 amazing people were buried during one of the bloodiest volcanic events in the dateY.
Researchers now believe that they understand what happened during those 32 hours of hell.
The leading new study indicates a five-hour window when the residents could have escaped-but they were very afraid to do so.
Mount Vizovius began erupted on August 24 in 79 AD around the back.
The 2000 volcano feet in Naples Bay, on the western coast of Italy, broadcast a tremendous cloud of rock and gas fragments in the air, known as the “pillar of the eruption”.
From about 2 pm, larger parts of pumice – porous volcanic rock – began in the rain.
This is when Pompeii and its people began to crush it, as the panels that reach nine feet were shattered on the settlement.
This destructive fire shower had sent Pompeii residents near Hercules to complete panic – but some would have remained by searching for shelter.
However, after five hours, at 7:06 pm, the first “beams” of the volcano began to wander in the city.
These are fatal flows of hot, toxic gases and volcanic molecules that were flooded under the mountain at 124 miles per hour.
These incendiary gas currents evaporated people and even turned human tissues into glass, in a process known as glazing.
The gas currents continued overnight and the next day at about 80 minutes.
At sunrise on August 25, the column emitted on Earth collapsed.
The bloodiest stream hit at 7:07 am in the morning of the explosion.
For nine consecutive hours, debris flow – 15 miles across – from a volcano hole and bottom on the side of the hill, and Pompei is consumed in a fatal cloud.
By 4 pm, the volcano began mixing with underground water, making it more explosive and more accurate pyroclighic flow.
This phase of flow traveled about 15 miles from the hole that does not contain human remains, indicating that a few – if any – from Pompeii residents were alive at this stage.
Finally, at 8.05 pm, the eruption stopped.
Another study found that in the absence of anyone alive, it was possible to kill the survivors due to an earthquake that followed.
This new research indicates that some of the population could stay if they fled during the five -hour period between 2 pm and 7 pm on the first day, but they were not prepared due to the risks, such as coated debris.
The bodies of Pompeii residents were kept in a sample protection cover.
The resulting structures allow us to see the situations in which people perished.
Since the mid -nineteenth century, the voids that the bodies have left were filled with plaster to re -create their last moments.
The study, published in the Journal of the Geological Assembly, which was reported by science, extends the timeline of the explosion from 19 to 32 hours.
The most famous witness of the explosion comes from a Romanian official named Benini.
Blini, who was 17 years old, wrote a series of messages describing what he saw in live details.
Record watching the umbrella -like cloud looming on the horizon on Mount Vizovius at about 1 pm – this was the pillar of the eruption.
Today is one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world.
It is still active and can explode again, although predicting the date of the bombing of volcanoes is a very difficult task for volcanic scientists.