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The Norse in Newfoundland:: L'Anse aux Meadows and Vinland

Birgitta Linderoth Wallace
- 01 Jan 2003 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 1, pp 5-43
TLDR
One thousand years ago, the Old World and the New stood face to face in the Strait of Belle Isle as discussed by the authors, and the landing of the Norse on the shores of North America was not the result of a sudden journey but the endpoint of a step-by-step expansion stretching over two centuries.
Abstract
ONE THOUSAND YEARS AGO, the Old World and the New stood face to face in the Strait of Belle Isle. The landing of the Norse on the shores of North America was not the result of a sudden journey but the endpoint of a step-by-step expansion stretching over two centuries. This expansion began in southwestern Norway, where chieftains and minor kings jostled for power over a growing population. In such a competitive context, migration across the North Sea to the Scottish Isles and the Faeroes was an attractive alternative to staying home. The contemporary development of seaworthy ships, capable of safely crossing open oceans and transporting people, their worldly belongings and livestock, made emigration possible. Note that the term “Norse” refers to all inhabitants of Viking Age and medieval Scandinavia, not just those of Norway (Webster 1988). Danes and Swedes were part of the migrations of this period, aptly named the Viking Age (c. 750-1050). Although they drastically affected the map of Europe, their role in the Norse ventures to North America was minor, and is therefore not discussed here. The term “Norse” is preferred here to the more popular “Viking”, which really refers to pirates or raiders. Although many men of the Viking Period would have been vikings at some time in their lives, women and children were not. The existence of Iceland may have been known in England and Ireland, and the Norse probably learned about this land from tales of Irish hermits, who were supposed to have made their way there in the eighth century. The Norse colonization of Iceland began shortly after 870, according to the Book of Settlement. This date has recently been confirmed by the date AD 871 ±2 for volcanic ash (tephra) from the Landnam layer, also found in the Greenland ice cap. The new settlers came from Norway and Norse Scotland, where the Norse were mixed with Celts and Picts through intermarriage and slavery. The distinctive genetic makeup of Ice-

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A mid to late Holocene cryptotephra framework from eastern North America

TL;DR: In this article, the authors extend the emerging North American tephrochronological framework by geochemically characterising seventeen cryptotephra layers from four newly explored peatlands.
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L'Anse Aux Meadows, Leif Eriksson's Home in Vinland

TL;DR: The authors argue that the archaeological findings at L'Anse aux Meadows shed a new light on the sagas, indicating that, like the Islendingabok of Ari the Wise, they contain more facts than is generally credited them.
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Evidence for European presence in the Americas in ad 1021

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the cosmic-ray-induced upsurge in atmospheric radiocarbon concentrations in ad 993 to determine the first known point at which humans encircled the globe.
References
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Change of Diet of the Greenland Vikings Determined from Stable Carbon Isotope Analysis and 14C Dating of Their Bones

TL;DR: In this article, the (super 14) C-date of 27 Greenland Norse skeletons from the late 10th to the middle 15th century was used to test and use (super 13) C dating of remains of humans who depended upon food of mixed marine and terrestrial origin.

The flora of Nova Scotia

A.E. Roland
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the proceedings of the Nova Scotian Institute of Science Volume XXI Part 3, 1944-1945, and present a bibliographical reference and index.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Works of Samuel de Champlain

TL;DR: The Complete PDF Book Library as mentioned in this paper is a collection of books related with works of Samuel de Champlain, which have some digital formats such us : paperbook, ebook, kindle, epub, fb2 and another formats.