This is sulfur water that gushes from the depths of the Parthenopean earth after flowing through the natural rocks of Acerra’s subsoil. Originating as tributaries of the ancient Clanio River, The Riullo springs, also used by the ancient Romans as thermal waters, were long thought to have dried up; disappeared in the 1980s and returned in 2006, with a play of floods and dries. Surrounding the spring are salubrious air and sulfur pools that granted the formation of healing plants.
These waters are laden with sulfur, an element useful for the treatment of skin diseases. "The Riullo spring," discovered really by chance, is a gift of nature that heals even very difficult to eradicate diseases. It is about the incredible power of nature raped to the core, still resisting the destruction and death that has been decimating animals and humans for decades now. Citizens report that the pond also heals difficult-to-treat cases in dermatology such as chronic dermatitis and psoriasis. A reality that is jarring in a land like Campania, kissed by the sea and the death given by ecomafias, but always pregnant with unquestionable beauty, full of contradictions and problems.