Some recent discoveries
First images of PHerc. 1667. When Vesuvius buried Herculaneum, it turned many papyrus scrolls in the Villa dei Papiri to burnt hunks of carbon without destroying their physical structure. Since the 2010s (or earlier?), people have tried to non-invasively image what remains of the scrolls. In June 2026, the latest “Vesuvius Challenge” prize was awarded to a team who successfully imaged the first “complete” scroll. The team’s report (“Complete virtual unwrapping and reading of a rolled Herculaneum papyrus”, Angelotti et al., 2026) points out that the scroll is even less “complete” than it used to be: invasive efforts in the late 20th century had already reduced it from about 14 grams of carbonized gunk to about 6 grams. The group’s full transcription consists of only 300 to 400 complete words. They identify PHerc. 1667 as some sort of philosophical treatise — unsurprising, as many of the scrolls that could already be deciphered turned out to be works of Philodemus. Contrary to some media reports, the title of PHerc. 1667’s work is unknown; but a separate finding reported in the same paper identifies PHerc. 139 as book 8 of Philodemus’s On gods (περὶ θεῶν, book Η).

