Amazing view of the missing city

Almost 2,000 years since it was buried under volcanic lava that erupted from Mount Vesuvius, the artifacts are still coming to light from the lost city of Pompeii. Now new images offer a highly filmed visual treasure. According to Pompeii expert and archaeologist Steven Ellis, air tours through ancient roads [...]
Now new images offer a highly filmed visual treasure. According to Pompeii expert and archaeologist Steven Ellis, air tours across ancient streets of the city were filmed as part of the research in the incredible digging efforts undertaken on this site.
The footage begins at the level of the road, falling over ancient cobblestone streets before expanding to discover the deadly neighbor approaching at a distance.
It was in 79 C.E. that a massive eruption by the volcano of 1,281 feet [1,281 m] destroyed the once - flourishing Roman city.
Pompey is now being activated again, but in another way, while archaeologists still reveal evidence of her past, such as the full body of a horse, strangled by the mortar nearly 2,000 years ago.
Blinking our Pompey escape to publishing has become hard, really hard. But maybe our fears are the video of our newborn within something of the coast and complexity. #Pampei #Archaeology #fieldwork #drone @Class cs UC @ DJIGbal Pic.twitter.com/auEphZ5u5 %Y
) Steven Ellis (@ Steven Ellis74) August 3, 2018












