I've been to Naples almost 4 years ago and one of the things i wanted to see the most, was Mt. Vesuvius. It not everyday that we get to see a volcano. I saw it and i bought cards, one of them was this very same card. Now i've it stamped & written in italian.
Daniele Minopoli Editore
IT-266744, sent by Betty.
Mount Vesuvius has experienced eight major eruptions in the last 17,000 years.
The 79 AD eruption is one of the most well known ancient eruptions in the world,
and may have killed more than 16,000 people. Ash, mud and rocks from this
eruption buried the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum. Pompeii is famous for the
casts the hot ash formed around victims of the eruptions. The unfortunate people
suffocated on ash in the air, which then covered them and preserved amazing
details of their clothing and faces.
Starting in 1631, Vesuvius entered
a period of steady volcanic activity, including lava flows and eruptions of ash
and mud. Violent eruptions in the late 1700s, 1800s and early 1900s created more
fissures, lava flows, and ash-and-gas explosions. These damaged or destroyed
many towns around the volcano, and sometimes killed people; the eruption of 1906
had more than 100 casualties. The most recent eruption was in 1944 during World
War II. It caused major problems for the newly-arrived Allied forces in Italy
when ash and rocks from the eruption destroyed planes and forced evacuations at
a nearby airbase. - in: http://geology.com/volcanoes/vesuvius/
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