Archaeologists use AI to reconstruct face of Pompeii eruption victim
Italian archaeologists have used artificial intelligence for the first time to recreate the face of a man killed in the Vesuvius eruption of 79 AD. The AI-generated image shows him holding a large terracotta mortar over his head for protection, with the flaming Vesuvius in the background. The Pompeii Archaeological Park released the image on Monday. At death, he carried a ceramic oil lamp and 10 bronze coins.
Workers unearthed the man's remains just outside one of Pompeii's south gates in the Porta Stabia necropolis. A rain of volcanic projectiles killed him early on the eruption's second day as he fled toward the sea. The damaged mortar found near his body served as makeshift head protection. This desperate act matches eyewitness accounts from Pliny the Younger, who described residents tying pillows or objects to their heads against falling debris. Another younger man's remains lay nearby; a pyroclastic flow likely killed him later during his escape attempt.
The digital model resulted from collaboration between the Pompeii Archaeological Park and the University of Padua's Digital Cultural Heritage Lab. They combined AI software with photo retouching techniques. Park director Gabriel Zuchtriegel called the technology essential for handling Pompeii's vast archaeological data and ensuring its protection and promotion.
Experts stressed AI's role as a tool under human oversight. Luciano Floridi of Yale's Digital Ethics Center said AI expands archaeological potential but produces hypotheses, not truths; scientists must review and validate them. Jacopo Bonetto of the University of Padua described the project as a controlled use of AI to build interpretive models within rigorous methodology.
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