(ANSA) - ROME, NOV 8 - For centuries, the remains of an adult
wearing a gold bracelet found buried in the ancient Roman city
of Pompeii following a volcanic eruption in 79 AD were believed
to belong to a mother who had died while trying to shield her
child.
Now a study carried out thanks to ancient DNA collected for the
first time from bits of human bones of victims has revealed that
the adult was actually a man who was unrelated to the child he
was trying to protect.
This is just one of the many stories rewritten thanks to the
study led by Harvard University, with the participation of the
University of Florence, which has been published by the journal
Current Biology.
The genetic data collected by scientists comes from bone
fragments recovered through plaster casts of people who died in
the eruption.
Their findings challenged old assumptions about the victims'
identities, ancestry and family relationships, originally made
starting from the mid-1700s, when archaeological research began
in the city.
David Caramelli, an anthropologist from the University of
Florence who co-authored the study led by David Reich, said the
team examined 14 plaster casts but found "readable and usable
DNA only in seven of them".
Caramelli said that, in addition to the man with the gold
bracelet shielding the child, scientists also discovered that
another couple of victims originally believed to be sisters or a
mother and daughter were in fact "two unrelated men". (ANSA).