
U604 Hose Coupling
Materials:
Body: Body: Brass
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Bushing: Brass
Features :
Designed for use between the hose and the pipe, or between the hose and other equipments.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U604-A/B 19kg/case of 100 22kg/case of 100 24x24x33 cm /case of 100
U604-C/D 28kg/case of 100 31kg/case of 100 30x30x36 cm /case of 100
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f 1st-century Roman life. But it would be a mistake to think that what happened to it is typical of a
Vesuvian eruption. The discovery, a few years ago, of several dozen entombed Bronze Age settlements, about
15km north-north-west of the volcano, is today showing that Vesuvius is able to devastate a far wider region than
succumbed in 79AD.
Nola is one of the best preserved of these sites. It was obliterated during the Avellino event, an eruption that took
place about 3,780 years ago, during the Bronze Age. Like Pompeii, Nola is a remarkable time capsule. Scenes of
everyday life were frozen by the volcanic deposits moulds of huts, with pottery inside; the skeletons of a dog and
nine pregnant goats found in a cage. And footprints. Thousands of them. Of adults, children and cows.
In a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Giuseppe Mastrolorenzo, of the Instituto
Nazionale di Geofisica fuel dispenser e Vulcanologia in Naples, and his colleagues explain that one of the main differences
between Nola and Pompeii is that lots of people seem to have escaped from Nola. Thousands were able to flee
while the eruption was in progress, and their footprints were pressed into the ash as they went. That this was
possible suggests that, unlike in the case of Pompeii, the surge of gas and rock fragments from the volcano was
settling as ash when people ran, and that this ash was cool enough to allow them to survive.
There is also evidence that a few settlements were rebuilt immediately after the eruption, but then abandoned. The
volcano had brought such immense destruction to the area that no human life was possible until at least 230 years
after the event—even up to 70km from Vesuvius.
While fuel dispenser the Avellino event seems to have allowed people to escape in a way that the Pompeiian eruption did not,
there are some other, less positive, conclusions about what would happen if it were repeated—for it was far larger
than the one that buried Pompeii. Within a fuel dispenser radius of 12km from the volcano such an eru