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Archaeologist discovers Viking secrets during epic three-year journey at sea
Archaeologist discovers Viking secrets during epic three-year journey at sea

New York Post

time10-06-2025

  • Science
  • New York Post

Archaeologist discovers Viking secrets during epic three-year journey at sea

A graduate student in Sweden has been learning about Vikings through an unusual method: He's done it by sailing like one. Archaeologist Greer Jarrett, a doctoral student at Lund University, has navigated over 3,000 miles along historical Viking trade routes in the Arctic Ocean. Advertisement With the help of his team, the academic has sailed the seas with a reconstructed sailing boat that would have been used by Vikings 1,200 years ago. So what has his research uncovered so far? Among other things, Jarrett has identified four possible Viking harbors along the coast of Norway. Jarrett's research suggests that Vikings ventured farther from Scandinavia than previously thought and used decentralized port networks during their journeys, according to a press release published by Lund University. 'In his latest study, he has found evidence of a decentralized network of ports, located on islands and peninsulas, which probably played a central role in trade and travel in the Viking era,' the statement added. Advertisement Due to the type of boats Vikings used, Jarrett said that they likely used small, easily accessible harbors quite often. With the help of his team, the academic has sailed the seas with a reconstructed sailing boat that would have been used by Vikings 1,200 years ago. Greer Jarrett /Lund University 'With this type of boat, it has to be easy to get in and out of the harbor in all possible wind conditions. There must be several routes in and out.' The archaeologist also noted that, while Viking historians know where trade journeys generally started and ended, knowledge about the more informal stops is scant. Advertisement Jarrett said his research is focused on 'what happened on the journeys between these major trading centers.' 'My hypothesis is that this decentralized network of ports, located on small islands and peninsulas, was central to making trade efficient during the Viking Age,' he explained. He also ran into a few challenges during his three-year journey. In one instance, while 15 miles out to sea, the boat's mast spar broke and sent the mainsail toppling down. Advertisement While Viking historians know where trade journeys generally started and ended, knowledge about the more informal stops is scant. Catrin Jakobsson /Lund University 'We had to lash two oars together to hold the sail, and hope that it would hold,' the student recalled. 'We made it back to the harbor safely, but then we had to spend several days repairing the boat before we could sail again.' 'On another trip, a minke whale suddenly surfaced and flapped its huge tail fin just meters from the boat.' Underwater currents and downslope winds also made it difficult for him to navigate near land. Jarrett needed to develop 'mental maps' to figure out where to go, as the Vikings did. But he was also pleasantly surprised by other aspects of the journey. Jarrett found that the primitive boats are stable, even without a deep keel, the release indicated. The archaeologist also learned how important relationships were during these voyages, where Vikings had to rely on one another to sail and survive. 'You need a boat that can withstand all kinds of weather conditions,' he said. 'But if you don't have a crew that can cooperate and put up with each other for long periods, these journeys would probably be impossible.' Advertisement 'The cold in [Norway's] Lofoten Islands was a challenge,' Jarrett said. 'Our hands really suffered. At that point, I realized just how crucial it is to have a good crew.' The Viking Era lasted from roughly 800 A.D. to 1050 A.D. Remnants of the period are still being found across Europe. Advertisement Last year, two curious metal detectorists found a 1,000-year-old Viking 'wallet.' More recently, Swedish archaeologists announced the discovery of an 'unusual' Viking-era coffin in April.

Archaeologist uncovers Viking secrets during epic three-year journey at sea
Archaeologist uncovers Viking secrets during epic three-year journey at sea

Fox News

time10-06-2025

  • Science
  • Fox News

Archaeologist uncovers Viking secrets during epic three-year journey at sea

A graduate student in Sweden has been learning about Vikings through an unusual method: He's done it by sailing like one. Archaeologist Greer Jarrett, a doctoral student at Lund University, has navigated over 3,000 miles along historical Viking trade routes in the Arctic Ocean. With the help of his team, the academic has sailed the seas with a reconstructed sailing boat that would have been used by Vikings 1,200 years ago. So what has his research uncovered so far? Among other things, Jarrett has identified four possible Viking harbors along the coast of Norway. Jarrett's research suggests that Vikings ventured farther from Scandinavia than previously thought and used decentralized port networks during their journeys, according to a press release published by Lund University. "In his latest study, he has found evidence of a decentralized network of ports, located on islands and peninsulas, which probably played a central role in trade and travel in the Viking era," the statement added. Due to the type of boats Vikings used, Jarrett said that they likely used small, easily accessible harbors quite often. "With this type of boat, it has to be easy to get in and out of the harbor in all possible wind conditions. There must be several routes in and out." The archaeologist also noted that, while Viking historians know where trade journeys generally started and ended, knowledge about the more informal stops is scant. Jarrett said his research is focused on "what happened on the journeys between these major trading centers." "My hypothesis is that this decentralized network of ports, located on small islands and peninsulas, was central to making trade efficient during the Viking Age," he explained. "Our hands really suffered. At that point, I realized just how crucial it is to have a good crew." He also ran into a few challenges during his three-year journey. In one instance, while 15 miles out to sea, the boat's mast spar broke and sent the mainsail toppling down. "We had to lash two oars together to hold the sail, and hope that it would hold," the student recalled. "We made it back to the harbor safely, but then we had to spend several days repairing the boat before we could sail again." "On another trip, a minke whale suddenly surfaced and flapped its huge tail fin just meters from the boat." Underwater currents and downslope winds also made it difficult for him to navigate near land. Jarrett needed to develop "mental maps" to figure out where to go, as the Vikings did. But he was also pleasantly surprised by other aspects of the journey. Jarrett found that the primitive boats are stable, even without a deep keel, the release indicated. He was also pleasantly surprised by other aspects of the journey. The archaeologist also learned how important relationships were during these voyages, where Vikings had to rely on one another to sail and survive. "You need a boat that can withstand all kinds of weather conditions," he said. "But if you don't have a crew that can cooperate and put up with each other for long periods, these journeys would probably be impossible." "The cold in [Norway's] Lofoten Islands was a challenge," Jarrett said. "Our hands really suffered. At that point, I realized just how crucial it is to have a good crew." The Viking Era lasted from roughly 800 A.D. to 1050 A.D. Remnants of the period are still being found across Europe. Last year, two curious metal detectorists found a 1,000-year-old Viking "wallet." More recently, Swedish archaeologists announced the discovery of an "unusual" Viking-era coffin in April.

An Archaeologist Sailed the Seas Using Only Viking Tech. Here's What He Learned
An Archaeologist Sailed the Seas Using Only Viking Tech. Here's What He Learned

Gizmodo

time25-05-2025

  • Science
  • Gizmodo

An Archaeologist Sailed the Seas Using Only Viking Tech. Here's What He Learned

Vikings were formidable Scandinavian warriors and sailors who, from around 800 to 1050 CE, raided, traded, and settled throughout northern Europe, Iceland, Greenland, and even as far as North America. Most of what scholars know about Viking maritime networks, however, has to do with their start and end points. After all, they could have taken any number of routes in between. To shed light on this gap, an archaeologist decided to follow in the Vikings' footsteps—or, more accurately, their wake. In order to reconstruct their seafaring itineraries, Lund University archaeologist Greer Jarrett sailed functional Viking-like boats along the Norwegian coast in a series of experimental voyages. By experiencing these journeys firsthand, the archaeologist hoped to understand where it would have made most sense for Viking sailors to seek shelter along the way to their destination. In this way, he identified four natural harbors that could have served as pitstops hundreds of years ago. 'A lot of the time, we only know about the starting and ending points of the trade that took place during the Viking Age. Major ports, such as Bergen and Trondheim in Norway, Ribe in Denmark, and Dublin in Ireland. The thing I am interested in is what happened on the journeys between these major trading centres,' Jarrett explained in a statement. 'My hypothesis is that this decentralised network of ports, located on small islands and peninsulas, was central to making trade efficient during the Viking Age.' Between September 2021 and July 2022, Jarrett and his crew undertook 15 sailing trials and two approximately three-week-long trial voyages in seven different Nordic clinker boats: traditional, small, open, wooden sailboats whose use in Nordic regions dates back almost 2,000 years. It wasn't always smooth sailing—once, the pole supporting the mainsail snapped over 15 miles (25 kilometers) from the coast, and they had to tie two oars together to secure the sail until they managed to return to land. Overall, they covered 1,494 nautical miles. The experimental archaeologist decided that possible 'havens' along maritime itineraries should have provided fresh water, shelter from swells and winds, and a good view of the sea. Furthermore, they had to be reachable in low visibility, big enough to host several boats, approachable and exitable from different directions, and located in a 'transition zone': coastal points between exposed regions and inner areas. Along with these criteria, Jarrett's investigation integrated a digital reconstruction of Viking Age sea levels, pre-established knowledge of large Viking maritime centers, and information about traditional 19th and early 20th century sailboat routes from sailors and fishermen. The archaeologist also clarified that his work regards long-range Viking expeditions rather than voyages for raiding and war purposes. 'This study's emphasis on practical seafaring knowledge and experience seeks to counter the common academic bias towards terrestrial and textual sources and worldviews,' he wrote in the study, published earlier this month in the Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. In this way he claims to have identified four potential Viking havens. These remote locations along the Norwegian coast each have varying degrees of pre-existing archaeological evidence indicating past human presence. Presumably, Jarrett is the first to suggest they may have also been pit stops along Viking maritime journeys. 'The list of possible Viking Age havens,' he explained, indicating a diagram in the study, 'is intended as a working document, which can shape and be shaped by future archaeological surveys and excavations.' It's worth remembering that, even with digital reconstructions of the Viking-era seascape, experimental voyages can never provide evidence of Viking activity to the degree of direct archaeological evidence. Nevertheless, creative and practical approaches such as Jarrett's stand as a reminder that sometimes the solution to a problem requires a different perspective—literally. It remains to be seen whether his work will inspire future archaeological surveys.

Archeologists are taking to the high seas in Viking ships
Archeologists are taking to the high seas in Viking ships

Yahoo

time22-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Archeologists are taking to the high seas in Viking ships

Greer Jarrett has spent the past three years sailing Scandinavia's waterways in historically accurate Viking ships. The voyages aren't part of some reenactment fantasy or preparation for an upcoming film role. Instead, the archeologist wants to show that exploration based on historical knowledge can help us better understand how an ancient culture lived, explored, and interacted with the world around them. Last year, Jarrett contributed to research suggesting the Vikings participated in more complex trading routes with Indigenous Arctic tribes than previously believed. After his latest excursions along the eastern coasts of Norway, Jarrett now says his team believes that rather than solely relying on concentrated trading outposts, Norse sailors frequently utilized a decentralized network of ports on the region's numerous islands and peninsulas. Their argument is detailed in a study published earlier this month in the Journal of Archeological Method and Theory. Since 2022, Jarrett and his intrepid crews have navigated multiple voyages aboard an open, square-rigged clinker boat built in the style of those used during the Viking Age (roughly 800–1050 CE). Their first trip traveled to and from the Arctic Circle from Trondheim, a common route for sailors after the Norwegian city's founding in 997 CE. The researchers have since sailed more than 3,100 miles along historic Viking trade routes, as well as into the Baltic Sea and the Kattegat waterway separating Sweden from Denmark. These expeditions, coupled with interdisciplinary analysis and evidence, has provided substantial evidence that the original Viking travelers journeyed further from land than historians long theorized. However, these trips weren't undertaken with the aid of a compass, sextant, or even a map. Instead, the Norse relied on mental maps informed by cultural myths tied to coastal landmarks. 'Examples include Viking stories about the islands Torghatten, Hestmona and Skrova off the Norwegian coast,' Jarrett explained in a Lund University profile. 'The stories serve to remind sailors of the dangers surrounding these places, or of their importance as navigation marks.' These tales were passed down through generations to help seafarers, or what Jarrett refers to as a 'Maritime Cultural Mindscape.' He also conducted interviews with present-day fishermen and sailors about various routes known to have been utilized in the 19th and early 20th century, before motorized boats were common. After previously demonstrating that Viking vessels can handle open oceanic waters even in tough conditions, Jarrett was determined to explore their capabilities close to land and among the fjords. He and his team sailed two trips along Norway's western coast towards the Lofoten Islands, an archipelago in the Arctic Circle. While their rigging and ship were modeled after ancient technology, researchers also utilized digital geospatial reconstructions of the region to envision the surrounding landscapes as they would have existed at the time of the Vikings. According to Jarrett, the daily challenges are 'just as great, but not as obvious' as ocean sailing. These included underwater currents and katabatic winds—the wind generated as a mountain's dense, cool, high-altitude air flows into a lower elevation. Weather proved an additional challenge, particularly the cold temperatures in the Lofoten Islands. 'Our hands really suffered. At that point I realized just how crucial it is to have a good crew,' Jarrett said. Extensive socio-cultural knowledge also didn't keep the voyages free from danger, either. At one point, the boat's mainsail yard snapped, forcing Jarrett and his crew to improvise a solution using only Viking-era materials. 'We had to lash two oars together to hold the sail, and hope that it would hold,' he said. After returning home, Jarrett and colleagues combined their data with historical documentation and cultural knowledge. It was clear to them that the numerous environmental and oceanographic variables made coastal journeys difficult in their own special set of ways. 'With this type of boat, it has to be easy to get in and out of the harbor in all possible wind conditions. There must be several routes in and out,' he said. 'Shallow bays are not an issue because of the shallow draft of the boats. Getting far up the narrow fjords, however, is tricky. They are difficult to sail upwind with a square rig, and the boats are sensitive to katabatic winds.' His resulting study argues it is highly unlikely that Vikings only docked at well-established, populated towns and harbors. Instead, sailors probably relied on a decentralized network of smaller port hubs located farther out to sea that Jarrett refers to as 'havens.' 'A lot of the time, we only know about the starting and ending points of the trade that took place during the Viking Age. Major ports, such as Bergen and Trondheim in Norway, Ribe in Denmark, and Dublin in Ireland,' said Jarrett. 'The thing I am interested in is what happened on the journeys between these major trading centers.' Jarrett has now identified four potential sites along the Norwegian coast that could have served as Viking havens. He hopes that archeological teams may soon investigate these areas to see what they might unearth. Evidence could include jetty and mooring post remnants, ballast stones, boatbuilding pits, temporary shelters, and artifacts indicating local commerce. At the same time, he acknowledges that these suggestions are starting points, not necessarily final destinations.'Due to the nature of the evidence, the methodology presented here can uncover potentials, but not realities,' Jarrett and the study's co-authors write. 'The list of possible Viking Age havens… is intended as a working document, which can shape and be shaped by future archaeological surveys and excavations.'

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