U.S. tourist, 23, falls into Mount Vesuvius after taking selfie — and lives to tell the tale
Global News
Baltimore resident Philip Carroll and three of his family members were trespassing on a restricted trail when he fell into the crater of Mount Vesuvius.
A 23-year-old American tourist from Maryland had to be rescued over the weekend after accidentally falling into the crater of Mount Vesuvius in southern Italy while taking a selfie.
The Baltimore resident has been identified as Philip Carroll, and he was visiting the famous volcano with three family members on Saturday when the incident occurred.
Mount Vesuvius is notorious for erupting in 79 C.E. and destroying the Roman city of Pompeii, burying the city and its occupants in ash, which has remarkably preserved the ancient site to this day. Vesuvius is considered an active — yet idle — volcano and last erupted in 1944.
Paolo Cappelli, president of Presidio Permanente Vesuvio, a base for guides at the top of Mount Vesuvius, told NBC News that Carroll and his family hiked to the top of the volcano through a restricted trail.
“This family took another trail, closed to tourists, even (though) there was a small gate and ‘no access’ signs,” Cappelli said.
When the family summited the 1,280-metre-tall volcano, Carroll took out his phone to take a selfie and accidentally dropped it into the crater. He decided to go after it.
“He tried to recover it, but slipped and slid a few metres into the crater. He managed to stop his fall, but at that point he was stuck,” Cappelli said.
“He was very lucky. If he kept going, he would have plunged 300 meters into the crater,” he added.