This two-picture combo shows cracks along the side of Mount Vettore, central Italy, on Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016, bottom, and a picture of Mount Vettore taken on Aug. 21, 2016, top. Earthquake aftershocks gave central Italy no respite on Tuesday, haunting a region where thousands of people were left homeless and frightened by a massive weekend tremor that razed centuries-old towns. (Massimo Percossi/ANSA via AP, AP Photo/Simona Polimeni)
This two-picture combo shows cracks along the side of Mount Vettore, central Italy, on Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016, bottom, and a picture of Mount Vettore taken on Aug. 21, 2016, top. Earthquake aftershocks gave central Italy no respite on Tuesday, haunting a region where thousands of people were left homeless and frightened by a massive weekend tremor that razed centuries-old towns. (Massimo Percossi/ANSA via AP, AP Photo/Simona Polimeni) Credit: Massimo Percossi/Simona Polimeni

Castelluccio Di Norcia, Italy — Some houses are collapsed outright, pancaked piles of stones and plaster. A pair of skis stick out. Some are cracked open neatly, exposing living rooms frozen in time.

The central Italian mountain village of Castelluccio di Norcia, among the most heavily hit by Sunday’s earthquake, is known for the beautiful blossoms of its lentil fields and its historic charm. Now it’s a ghost town.

With the roads cut off, almost all of the 300 inhabitants were evacuated by helicopter. They all survived after an earlier quake in August prompted them to move into safer housing like camper vans or containers.

But a small group of 13 hardy souls refuses to leave. Mostly farmers, they want to stay close to their cattle, sheep and horses — their livelihood, without which they would truly have nothing left to come back for.

“Practically we’ve returned to the stone age,” said Augusto Coccia, 65.

He was among the farmers housed in containers in the town square, eating breakfast, when the earthquake struck. It bounced the containers about and filled the air with a thick fog of dust.

The 6.6-magnitude tremor, the country’s most powerful in 36 years, pulled down buildings and historic churches in villages across the Appenine mountains. In Castelluccio, the ground is now as much as two feet lower, according to the national geophysics institute.

This town’s plight was worsened by the fact that the roads were cut off.

Rescue helicopters brought in the bare necessities — food and water — on Sunday but little else.

Coccia and the others who stayed behind cook under the open sky with gas canisters. They have no heating, electricity or constant water supply. The temperature drops to as low as minus 20 degrees at night.

“The medical supplies were delivered to us today. It’s been three days since we requested them but it’s very hard to get them to us,” he said.