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Pompeii Incense Study Finds Burned Wine and Imported Resin

The results tie home worship to far‑flung trade through residues that match Roman ritual accounts.

Overview

  • The peer-reviewed study, published Monday in Antiquity, analyzed ash from two censers excavated at Pompeii and nearby Boscoreale.
  • Researchers detected markers of a grape product consistent with wine or vinegar, supporting texts that describe the praefatio, a rite of burning wine with incense.
  • Chemical and microscopic profiles point to an imported resin from the Burseraceae family, likely elemi from India or sub‑Saharan Africa, which signals long‑distance supply lines.
  • The team also identified charred oak, laurel and mulberry, using microscopy, spectroscopy, phytoliths and organic acid analysis to reconstruct the scents of household worship.
  • Authors caution that missing sediment controls and long post‑excavation histories could mean some compounds are intrusive, so tighter chain‑of‑custody and contextual sampling are needed next.