Pompeii- A segment of a counter was partially dug up during work to shore up it’s oft-crumbling ruins
The following written content by Lucia I. Suarez Sang
A supposed fast-food restaurant at Pompeii has been completely unearthed, helping to reveal dishes that might have been popular for the citizens of the ancient Roman city.
Massimo Osanna, the longtime chief of the Pompeii Archaeological Park, said on Saturday that while some 80 such fast-food eateries have been found at the site of the massive volcanic explosion, it is the first thermopolium to be completely unearthed.
An undated photo made available by the Pompeii Archeological park press office shows the thermopolium in the Pompeii archeological park, near Naples, Italy. (Luigi Spina/Parco Archeologico di Pompei via AP)
A segment of a counter was partially dug up in 2019 during work to shore up Pompeii’s oft-crumbling ruins.
Since then, archeologists have revealed a multi-sided counter, with wide holes inserted into its top, which purportedly held deep vessels for hot foods. The counter boasts an image of an undersea nymph astride a horse. Images of two upside-down mallards and a rooster also brightened the eatery and likely served to advertise the menu.
Valeria Amoretti, a Pompeii staff anthropologist, said in a statement that initial analyses show how the images painted could represent the foods and beverages sold inside.
An undated photo made available by the Pompeii Archeological park press office shows the thermopolium in the Pompeii archeological park, near Naples, Italy. (Luigi Spina/Parco Archeologico di Pompei via AP)
She noted that duck bone fragments were found in one of the containers, along with remains from goats, pigs, fish and snails.
“We know what they were eating that day,” said Osanna.
Amoretti said one surprise find was the complete skeleton of “an extremely small example” of an adult dog, whose height at shoulder level was about 8 to 10 inches. She said it is rare to find remains from ancient times of such small dogs and that such discoveries “attest to selective breeding in the Roman epoch to obtain this result.”
An undated photo made available by the Pompeii Archeological park press office shows the thermopolium in the Pompeii archeological park, near Naples, Italy. (Luigi Spina/Parco Archeologico di Pompei via AP). Read more from Fox News.
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