Vesuvian ash cloud suspected of turning brain to glass

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A fragment of the organic glass found inside the skull of the deceased individual in Herculaneum. Credit: Pier Paolo Petrone

A unique dark-colored organic glass, found inside the skull of an individual who died in Herculaneum during the 79 CE Mount Vesuvius eruption, likely formed when they were killed by a very hot but short-lived ash cloud. The conclusion, from research published in Scientific Reports, is based on an analysis of the physical properties of the glass, thought to comprise the fossilized brain of the individual.

Glass rarely occurs naturally due to the specific conditions required for formation. For a substance to become glass, its liquid form must cool fast enough to not crystallize when becoming solid—requiring a large temperature difference between the substance and its surroundings—and the substance must become solid at a temperature well above that of its surroundings.

As a result, it is extremely difficult for an organic glass to form, as ambient temperatures are rarely low enough for water—a key component of organic matter—to solidify. The only suspected natural organic glass was identified in 2020 in Herculaneum, Italy, but it was not clear how this glass formed.

Guido Giordano and colleagues analyzed fragments of glass sampled from inside the skull and spinal cord of a deceased individual from Herculaneum, found lying in their bed in the Collegium Augustalium. The results of the analysis—which included imaging using X-rays and electron microscopy—indicated that, for the brain to become glass, it must have been heated above at least 510 degrees Celsius before cooling rapidly.

  • Archaeology: Vesuvian ash cloud turned brain to glass
    A sample of the organic glass under direct light. This is a section of Fig. 2 from the published article. Credit: Guido Giordano et al./Scientific Reports
  • Archaeology: Vesuvian ash cloud turned brain to glass
    The remains of the deceased individual in situ in their bed in the Collegium Augustalium, Herculaneum. Credit: Pier Paolo Petrone
  • Archaeology: Vesuvian ash cloud turned brain to glass
    Annotated image of the remains of the deceased individual in situ in their bed in the Collegium Augustalium, Herculaneum. This is a section of Fig. 1 from the published article. Credit: Guido Giordano et al./Scientific Reports

The authors note that this could not have occurred if the individual was heated solely by the pyroclastic flows which buried Herculaneum, as the temperatures of these flows did not reach higher than 465 degrees Celsius and would have cooled slowly.

The authors therefore conclude, based on modern volcanic eruption observations, that a super-heated ash cloud which dissipated quickly was the first deadly event during Vesuvius’s eruption. They theorize that such an event would have raised the individual’s temperature above 510 degrees Celsius, before it rapidly cooled to ambient temperatures as the cloud dissipated. The bones of the individual’s skull and spine likely protected the brain from complete thermal breakdown, allowing fragments to form this unique organic glass.

More information:
Guido Giordano, Unique formation of organic glass from a human brain in the Vesuvius eruption of 79 CE, Scientific Reports (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-88894-5. www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-88894-5

Citation:
Vesuvian ash cloud suspected of turning brain to glass (2025, March 2)
retrieved 2 March 2025
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