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On the morning of August 24, 79 AD, slaves were already turning the volcanic stone mills in Pompeii's bakeries. The aqueduct pressure had been dropping for days — nobody understood why. The sulfur smell in the well water had intensified overnight. Temple priests were reading sheep livers to predict the day's fortune. They predicted nothing. At exactly 1PM, the rock plug sealing Vesuvius's volcanic conduit shattered. Millions of tons of pulverized rock exploded 25 kilometers into the stratosphere at supersonic speed. The mushroom column blocked the sun. Pumice stones the size of fists began raining at 15 centimeters per hour. The streets filled faster than people could run. The wealthy grabbed their gold and silver. It slowed them down. It killed them. Across the bay, Admiral Pliny the Elder launched the entire imperial fleet — quadriremes, triremes, hundreds of oarsmen — directly into the disaster. The pumice floating on the ocean surface clogged the oars. The seabed was rising from tectonic pressure, creating new reefs under the hulls. The rescue mission failed before it reached shore. By midnight, 2 meters of ash buried every exit door in the city. Patricians and slaves crawled over the same pumice drifts in total darkness. Wealth meant nothing. Rank meant nothing. At 4AM the pyroclastic surge hit at 300km/h. Temperature: 300 degrees Celsius. Time to death: less than one second. 20,000 people. Frozen in time. Forever. #Pompeii #Vesuvius #AncientRome #LivingOneDayIn #RomanEmpire #PompeiiEruption #AncientHistory #HistoryDocumentary #79AD #MountVesuvius #RomanHistory #Archaeology #LostCities #Herculaneum #HistoricalDocumentary #AncientCivilization #RomanLife #Catastrophe #PompeiiVictims #HistoryChannel