Pompeii still has many secrets to uncover—but should we
keep digging?
In the last year alone, excavations in the ancient
Roman city of Pompeii have uncovered a 2,000-year-old
laundromat, a bedroom used by slaves, and a fresco
_________ an ancestor of pizza. None of those discoveries,
however, stemmed from new digs into the 20-foot layer of
ash that encased the city after Mount Vesuvius’ eruption in
A.D. 79.
Pompeii, of course, still has more secrets to reveal.
Estimates vary but anywhere between 15 to 25% of the city
remains covered. For many archaeologists though, the
question isn’t so much what they have left to find—but
should they continue digging at all?
For decades, the Italian government had a
moratorium on any new excavations in Pompeii. That means
most of the finds are byproducts of efforts to preserve and
restore what’s already been unearthed, according to Steven
Ellis, a professor of Roman archaeology at the University of
Cincinnati who worked on excavating Pompeii’s Porta Sabia
_______________. “We have enough of [excavated]
Pompeii for the general public. We have enough of Pompeii
for the scholarly community to learn from,” Ellis said. “What
we really need to be doing is keeping it as well preserved for
the future as we __________ can.” Going back over those
unearthed areas with new and better technology could yield
just as exciting discoveries as digging up new sites without
putting the city—and future generations’ ability to see it—at
risk, Ellis adds.
(Source: National Geographic — adaptation.)
According to the text, check the CORRECT item:
Incorreta. Gabarito oficial da banca:
Veja como esse erro impacta seu desempenho geral. Ver estatísticas