The DNA of Pompeii victims can rewrite their history

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Some of the long-held assumptions about victims of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius near Pompeii in 79CE are wrong, according to international researchers who investigated the DNA of bodies found preserved under the ash. Pompeii was rediscovered in the 1700s and researchers have been studying the town since, which paints a picture of life at the time, and this team were able to take skeletal material from the semi-preserved bodies to learn more about who they were. The researchers say some traditional interpretations of who the bodies were are incorrect - for example, an adult wearing a golden bracelet and holding a child was interpreted as a mother with her child, but DNA shows they were a man holding a child unrelated to them. The researchers say our improved technology can correct some of our assumptions about what life was like in the age of Pompeii that may be biased by modern life.

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From: Cell Press

Peer-reviewed           Observational study
DNA evidence rewrites histories for people buried in volcanic eruption in ancient Pompeii

In 79 CE, the active volcanic system in southern Italy known as Somma-Vesuvius erupted, burying the small Roman town of Pompeii and everyone in it. The “Pompeii eruption” covered everything in a layer of ash that preserved many of the bodies. Now, ancient DNA collected from the famed body casts alters the history that’s been written since the once forgotten town’s rediscovery in the 1700s. As reported on November 7, 2024, in Current Biology, the DNA evidence shows that individuals’ sexes and family relationships don’t match traditional interpretations that had been formulated largely from modern-day assumptions.

“The scientific data we provide do not always align with common assumptions,” says David Reich of Harvard University. “For instance, one notable example is the discovery that an adult wearing a golden bracelet and holding a child, traditionally interpreted as a mother and child, were an unrelated adult male and child. Similarly, a pair of individuals thought to be sisters, or mother and daughter, were found to include at least one genetic male. These findings challenge traditional gender and familial assumptions.”

The study team including Alissa Mittnik, also at Harvard University, and David Caramelli of the Universita di Firenze in Italy had heard the stories of Pompeii. They realized that ancient DNA and strontium isotopes used to date samples could help them understand better the diversity and origins of Pompeii’s residents. They extracted DNA from highly fragmented skeletal remains mixed with the plaster casts, focusing on 14 of 86 casts that are undergoing restoration.

The researchers’ goal was to learn as much as possible from the DNA evidence about these 14 victims. Their approach allowed them to accurately determine the genetic relationships, sex, and ancestry of those 14 individuals. What they found out was largely in contrast to long-held assumptions based solely on the physical appearance and positioning of the casts.

The genetic data offered insight into the Pompeiians’ ancestry, revealing that the Pompeiians had diverse genomic backgrounds. They primarily descended from recent immigrants from the eastern Mediterranean. The finding highlights the cosmopolitan nature of the Roman Empire, according to the researchers.

“Our findings have significant implications for the interpretation of archaeological data and the understanding of ancient societies,” Mittnik says. “They highlight the importance of integrating genetic data with archaeological and historical information to avoid misinterpretations based on modern assumptions. This study also underscores the diverse and cosmopolitan nature of Pompeii’s population, reflecting broader patterns of mobility and cultural exchange in the Roman Empire.”

The findings highlight the need for a multidisciplinary approach including genetic analysis to fully understand the past of Pompeii and beyond, the researchers say.

“This study illustrates how unreliable narratives based on limited evidence can be, often reflecting the worldview of the researchers at the time,” Caramelli says.

Multimedia

Pompeii Body Casts
Pompeii Body Casts
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Pompeii Body Casts 2
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Pompeii Body Casts 3

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conference:
Current Biology
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Organisation/s: Universita` di Firenze, Italy
Funder: The ancient DNA laboratory work and analysis at Florence was funded by PRIN grant number 2020HJXCK9 of the Italian Ministry of Research ‘‘Pompeii: A Molecular Portrait’’ to David Caramelli and by the European Union grant—Next Generation EU—PNRR M4C2—Investimento 1.3. PE5-Change. D.R. is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), and the ancient DNA laboratory work and analysis at Harvard were also supported by National Institutes of Health grant HG012287, John Templeton Foundation grant 61220, the Allen Discovery Center program (which is a Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group advised program of the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation), and a gift from J.-F. Clin.
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