Scientists excavating the ruins of Pompeii have discovered a construction site left frozen in time by the eruption of Italy's ...
Roman buildings were engineered with hot mixed, self-healing concrete of quicklime and volcanic ash that strengthens in seawater.
Isotopic analysis confirmed that the workers in Pompeii relied on hot-mixing when making their concrete. Samples from the ...
Pompeii Archeological Park site map, with showing where the ancient building site is located, with colour coded piles of raw construction materials (right): purple: debris; green: piles of dry ...
Discover how a newly excavated site in Pompeii is helping scientists understand how ancient Romans made concrete that has endured for thousands of years.
The Roman Empire was literally built on a special form of extra-tough, self-healing concrete that has managed to stay strong ...
“These results revealed that the Romans prepared their binding material by taking calcined limestone (quicklime), grinding ...
MIT scientists have used modern technology to unravel the mysterious self-healing properties of ancient Roman concrete.
After more than a century of speculation, researchers have traced the likely origins of the legendary Hjortspring boat through chemical analysis of its construction materials and the discovery of an ...
What did that feel like for him?” Boddice asked. I stared for a few seconds while Boddice smiled encouragingly, as if he’d ...
A preserved construction site at Pompeii is reshaping modern understanding of how Rome engineered its famously durable concrete.