The Italian Archaeologist Who Turned Pompeii Into a Science by Pouring Plaster Into Empty Holes
When the Bourbon-era treasure hunters were finished with Pompeii, the site was a substantially-mined ruin without a coherent excavation record. Giuseppe Fiorelli took over the directorship in 1863 and turned the site into the founding example of modern archaeological method. His most-famous innovation was to pour liquid plaster into the empty voids left by [Vesuvius's victims](/articles/vesuvius-pompeii-79).
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