Buying a 5 Euro per person ticket to enter this museum with a huge indoor space display shows archaeological excavations of the ruins of an ancient city. This is a real rubble. Looking at the exhibition boards, we know that it was a town buried in the 17th century B.C. by a volcanic eruption. Unexpectedly, this huge city under the vault is a living relic of human beings 3,700 years ago. From the scene, we can see that people at that time had mastered the well-designed drainage system and complex multi-storey building construction technology. Ancient Greek civilization tells us here that it used to be brilliant. From the pictures and texts on the wall of the museum, we also know that the archaeological sites we see today were discovered and excavated in 1969, and the museum was restored in 2012 and opened to the outside world. We looked all the way along the tour corridor. Although there were many icons for explanation, because of the language barrier, we could only see the macro scene, and many things did not know its background. There are a lot of visitors here. Basically, it can be said that there is an endless stream of visitors. We really envy the sound and colorful explanations of the team's commentators.