ANSWER 1Ceaser found the 'lost' city!! March 23, 1748
answer 2:Yes Caesar did find the lost city. but was found on March 23, 1748
no i think she means WA=t were founed in it
In the late 16th century, the ruins at Pompeii were discovered by the architect, Domenico Fontana. Excavation began there in 1748.
Pompeii was first properly excavated by Italian archaeologist Guiseppe Fiorelli (1823-1896).
Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus, or better known as Pliny the Younger.
It's not a case of how much he uncovered, it's more the techniques that he used that made him the best Archaeologist to direct the digs in Pompeii.
The bodies were not stone, but they had been covered in ash which then hardened, creating hallows where the bodies were. The people who uncovered Pompeii poured plaster into the holes creating plaster casts.
A man was digging in 1748 and found a sign saying Pompeii thinking it was a villa sign for the general Pompeii the rest has been gradually dug up over the last 100 years
It didn't. The town was complete buried and lost to time from the eruption of Vesuvius for about two thousand years until uncovered in the 1800s.
Pompeii was lost after an eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 AD and it sat buried until it was found and uncovered. It is made up of 65 acres and there are still areas that are buried. Time stopped that day in 79 AD leaving historians and visitors a view of life in the ancient city of Pompeii and Italy.
It ruined all of pompeii and killed over 18,200 people and the city was coverd in ash and later turned in to hard rock and it was totally covered until someone uncovered it and it took him ages i forgot when and who it was hoped this helped!
It has almost all been uncovered now. They are now uncovering the neighbouring town of Herculaneum as it was also covered in the 79 CE eruption.
Overexposure. Paintings are fading because they have been uncovered and are being effected by the elements. Mass tourism as well, litter, unstablility of buildings and roads.
Archaeologists did not find anything after Pliny the Younger. Pliny the Younger only described the eruption of Mount Vesuvius when it happened in 79. Pompeii was first discovered in 1599 during works to divert a local river, but the uncovered areas were covered again. Pompeii was rediscovered again in 1748 and the first archaeological excavations started in 1764.
Beginning in 1981, Michael Sheridan from Arizona State University reamed up with Franco Barberi. These two men headed a team of experts that uncovered much more about the fates of Pompeii and its small neighboring town of Herculaneum.
Pompeii is still an archeological dig and is open for visitors. I was there in 05 and my big surprise was that I had to walk up hill in a tunnel to the ruins. The eruption dumped 65 feet of ash and rocks and that means the ground level today is below the Pompeii level. Not all of Pompeii is uncovered, but the city was large and the things you see today show you what life was like in 79 AD. Murals on walls of the villas are still as vibrant and colorful as they were when the eruption happened. If you live in California the Getty villa in Santa Monica is an exact copy of a Pompeii villa that is a museum of ancient art. It is free to visit and Getty copied it down to the plants that were found in Pompeii. It is worth a visit if you can get there.
A dog mosaic is important to anyone interested enough in having dog mosaic art -- in the sense that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Archaeologists uncovered dog mosaics in Pompeii after the city was buried by Vesuvius. This indicates that dog mosaics were importnat to the people of Pompeii.