Pompeii last hours

Exactly 1,933 years after Mount Vesuvius’ eruption buried the Roman city of Pompeii and its residents in a lethal blanket of ash, the catastrophe is being recounted as it was back then — only this time as a stream of tweets on Twitter.

The minute-by-minute reconstruction of Pompeii’s destruction on Aug. 24 in the year 79 is based on the tale of Pliny the Elder, a Roman scholar and admiral who took command of the city’s evacuation. The last day of Pompeii will be retweeted as it happened, starting at 10 a.m. ET Friday, by @Elder_Pliny, a ghost who’s being brought to life by the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.

Why Denver? It’s because the museum is due to host an exhibit about Pompeii titled “A Day in Pompeii,” opening Sept. 14. The museum says it’ll be offering an interactive map tracing Pliny’s
movements on that fateful day.
The old guy has already gotten a premonition of disaster: “The gods must be roaming the earth,” he tweeted on Wednesday. “I felt the ground shake this morning.”

Don’t tell @Elder_Pliny, but the big day is not going to end well for him. In real life, his story had to be told by his nephew, Pliny the Younger, who provided pretty much the only eyewitness account of what happened. In his letters to Tacitus, the younger Pliny describes how his uncle sailed into the chaos:
“Ash was falling onto the ships now, darker and denser the closer they went. Now it was bits of pumice, and rocks that were blackened and burned and shattered by the fire. Now the sea is shoal; debris from the mountain blocks the shore. He paused for a moment wondering whether to turn back as the helmsman urged him. ‘Fortune helps the brave,’ he said.