Italian and French archaeologists have discovered four skeletons and gold coins in the ruins of an ancient shop on the outskirts of Pompeii, officials said Friday.
Three gold coins and a necklace's pendant were scattered among the bones. In the workshop was an oven which archaeologists think might have been used to make bronze objects.
The excavation of that and a second ancient shop started in May near a necropolis in the Herculaneum port area. Archaeologists are puzzling over what kind of business the second shop did. It features a circular well accessible by a spiral staircase and dug out of the terrain.
Excavations continue.
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Gold coin found in recent excavations outside Porta Ercolano, Pompeii, near Naples, Italy [Credit: Pompeii Archaeological Site Press Office via AP] |
In another stunning discovery, the dig revealed a 4th century B.C. tomb of an adult, complete with funerary vases. The find "adds to the rare funerary testimony of the pre-Roman age," the statement said.
Inside the tomb was the skeleton of an adult, possibly male, lying on his back. Near the arms and feet were at least six vases painted black.
Pompeii and nearby Herculaneum were ancient Roman towns. Much of the area is still to be excavated, including of Herculaneum, which was buried deeper, beneath as much as 80 feet (24 meters) of ash.
Author: Frances D'Emilio | Source: The Associated Press [June 24, 2016]