Latest News for: viking metal

Edit

In One Ear: Move over, Columbus

The Daily Astorian 04 Nov 2021
Move over Columbus, the Vikings settled in North America in 1021, centuries before Columbus "sailed the ocean blue" in ... Scientists knew it was Vikings who built L'Anse aux Meadows from the kind of metal tools they found at the site, and the type of cuts they made.
Edit

Machine Head and Amon Amarth announce 2022 UK and European arena tour

NME 01 Nov 2021
The US and Swedish metal bands will co-headline the ‘Vikings And Lionhearts’ tour between September and October 2022 with support from new Swedish band The Halo Effect ... “This absolute monster of a tour will kick off Autumn 2022 and will be the most devastating night of your metal lives.
Edit

Researchers date earliest known Viking settlement in North America to 1021

The Keene Sentinel 30 Oct 2021
In the 1960s, scientists uncovered an early Viking settlement in L’Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland ... They also knew that Indigenous people could not have cut the slabs, as the wood showed signs of a metal blade, which Vikings, and not local communities, possessed at the time ... Vikings probably came in search of resources.
Edit

Study says Viking settlement in Canada 500 years before Columbus

Beijing News 26 Oct 2021
Scientists from the University of Groningen recently used a new dating technique and and referenced a past solar storm to confirm that a Viking settlement existed in L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, Canada in AD1021. It also confirmed that the Vikings reached the New World 471 years before Christopher Columbus crossed the Atlantic.
Edit

Historical discovery brings Vikings and Skraelings full circle

Bangor Daily News 25 Oct 2021
The specialists even assumed that it happened in the early 11th century, because the Viking sagas more or less said so ... The Dutch-led team of archaeologists who solved the riddle used three pieces of wood from the settlement that had been cut by metal (and therefore Viking) tools.
Edit

Vikings beat Columbus across the Atlantic by 470 years. Astrophysics and tree rings helped scientists ...

Business Insider 22 Oct 2021
L'Anse aux Meadows was a North American landing point for the Vikings and is now part of Canada's National Park system. The indentations in the earth show evidence of rows of Viking houses. Gail Shotlander/Getty Images The Vikings inhabited Newfoundland 470 years before Columbus landed in North America, research found.
photo: Creative Commons / JC Merriman
Krampmacken has been reconstructed from an archaeological boat discovery from the end of the Viking Age. Researchers wanted to build a boat that could handle both the waves of the Baltic Sea and the shallow rivers of the east
Edit

The Vikings Beat Christopher Columbus to Reaching America by 500 Years

Interesting Engineering 22 Oct 2021
While the presence of Vikings at L'Anse aux Meadows was conclusive, the date of exactly when they were there was not ... The presence of metal blades indicated the wood was cut down by the Vikings, as the indigenous people living in the area at that time didn't produce metal blades ... Viking house at L'Anse aux Meadows.
Edit

Vikings were in the Americas exactly 1,000 years ago

Hartford Courant 21 Oct 2021
The site’s eight timber-framed structures resemble Viking buildings in Greenland, and archaeological artifacts found there — including a bronze cloak pin — are decidedly Norse in style. Scientists now believe that this site, known as L’Anse aux Meadows, was inhabited by Vikings who came from Greenland.
Edit

Study: Vikings first came to North America exactly 1,000 years ago

The Bradford Era 21 Oct 2021
According to the study, published in the journal Nature, when the Vikings reached the island, they used metal blades —which were not used by the Indigenous population at the time — to cut down several types of trees to build their settlement.
Edit

The Vikings beat Christopher Columbus to the Americas by 471 years! Scandinavian warriors arrived 1,000 ...

The Daily Mail 20 Oct 2021
The wood has been attributed to the Vikings because it showed evidence of cutting and slicing by blades made of metal — a material not produced by the Indigenous population ... That wood has been attributed to the Vikings because it showed evidence of cutting and slicing by blades made of metal — a material not produced by the indigenous population.
Edit

Ancient Solar Storm Reveals Vikings Were In North America Exactly 1,000 Years Ago

IFL Science 20 Oct 2021
Vikings were present in Newfoundland in AD 1021,” confirms the study ... The team located this anomaly 29 rings in from the edge in three wooden artifacts, known to be Viking due to their location and evidence of being cut with metal – the local Indigenous population didn’t manufacture metal at the time.
Edit

Vikings discovered America 500 years before Christopher Columbus, study claims

The Independent 20 Oct 2021
The chopping of wood by Vikings at L’Anse aux Meadows - a site in Newfoundland, Canada which has been linked to Erikson - was dated to exactly the year 1021 AD, the researchers say in the new study, published in the Nature journal ... “Previous dates for the Viking presence in the Americas have relied heavily on the Icelandic Sagas.
Edit

Europeans in the Americas 1,000 years ago

Phys Dot Org 20 Oct 2021
The Vikings got there centuries before, although exactly when has remained unclear ... The Vikings sailed great distances in their iconic longships ... In this study, the chopping of wood by Vikings at L'Anse aux Meadows was dated to exactly the year 1021 AD ... Previous dates for the Viking presence in the Americas have relied heavily on the Icelandic Sagas.
Edit

Solar storm confirms Vikings settled in North America exactly 1,000 years ago

The Observer 20 Oct 2021
Half a millennium before Christopher Columbus crossed the Atlantic, the Vikings reached the “New World”, as the remains of timber buildings at L’Anse aux Meadows on the northern tip of Canada’s Newfoundland testify ... Skeletons of Viking men to be reunited in Danish exhibition ... Proof that the trees were cut by Vikings was there, too.
×