New DNA evidence from the ruins of the ancient city of Pompeii reveal that many of the presumptuous narratives about the charred victims are entirely false, according to a new study.Researchers, including some from Harvard University, focused on fourteen of the castings of bodies that were created in the late 1880s to preserve the remains of the victims of the historic volcanic eruption, according to the study published in the journal Current Biology.The team extracted DNA from the remains of those skeletons and conducted genetic tests to figure out where they were from — and to check out the long-running narrative biographical theories generated about the anonymous charred bodies.In one notable domicile, known as “the house of the golden bracelet,” it was assumed for ages that a mother and child held each other as they were consumed by molten lava.The house was named for a piece of jewelry worn by the adult with the child.
Nearby those remains, another adult and child, which were assumed to be the other members of the nuclear family.The DNA evidence shows that the four people were all males and not related to each other at all, according to the study.Another famous pair frozen in time were long considered to be sisters locked in embrace.
At least one of those people was a genetic male, the study found.“We were able to disprove or challenge some of the previous narratives built upon how these individuals were kind of found in relation to each other,” said Alissa Mittnik of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, according to the Associated Press.
“It opens up different interpretations for who these people might have been.”“But of course we don’t really know, and we can’t really say, who these individuals were and how they interacted with each other,” Mittnik added, according to The New York Times.The study claims that many of the residents of Pompeii had migrated there from the eastern Mediterranean, from places su...