The Guardian Australia

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

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Long before Columbus crossed the Atlantic, eight timber-framed buildings covered in sod stood on a terrace above a peat bog and stream at the northern tip of Canada’s island of Newfoundla­nd, evidence that the Vikings had reached the New World first.

But precisely when the Vikings journeyed to establish the L’Anse aux Meadows settlement had remained unclear – until now.

A new type of dating technique using a long-ago solar storm as a reference point has revealed that the settlement was occupied in AD1021, exactly a millennium ago and 471 years before the first voyage of Columbus. The technique was used on three pieces of wood cut for the settlement, all pointing to the same year.

The Viking voyage represents multiple milestones for humankind. The settlement offers the earliest-known evidence of a transatlan­tic crossing. It also marks the place where the globe was finally encircled by humans, who thousands of years earlier had trekked into North America over a land bridge that once connected Siberia to Alaska.

“Much kudos should go to these northern Europeans for being the first human society to traverse the Atlantic,” said geoscienti­st Michael Dee of the University of Groningen in the Netherland­s, who led the study published on Wednesday in the journal Nature.

The Vikings ventured through Europe, sometimes colonizing and other times trading or raiding. They possessed extraordin­ary boat-building and navigation skills and establishe­d settlement­s on Iceland and Greenland.

“I think it is fair to describe the trip as both a voyage of discovery and a search for new sources of raw materials,” Dee said. “Many archaeolog­ists believe the principal motivation for them seeking out these new territorie­s was to uncover new sources of timber, in particular. It is generally believed they left from Greenland, where wood suitable for constructi­on is extremely rare.“

The Viking Age is traditiona­lly defined as AD 793 to 1066, presenting a wide range for the timing of the transatlan­tic crossing. Ordinary radiocarbo­n dating – determinin­g the age of organic materials by measuring their content of a particular radioactiv­e isotope of carbon – proved too imprecise to date L’Anse aux Meadows, which was discovered in 1960, although there was a general belief it was the 11th century.

The new dating method relies on the fact that solar storms produce a distinctiv­e radiocarbo­n signal in a tree’s annual growth rings. It was known there was a significan­t solar storm – a burst of high-energy cosmic rays from the sun – in AD992.

In all three pieces of wood examined, from three different trees, 29 growth rings were formed after the one that bore evidence of the solar storm, meaning the wood was cut in 1021, said the University of Groningen archaeolog­ist Margot Kuitems, the study’s first author.

It was not local indigenous people who cut the wood because there is evidence of metal blades, which they did not possess, Dee said.

The length of the occupation remains unclear, though it may have been a decade or less, and perhaps 100 Norse people were present at any given time, Dee said. Their structures resembled Norse buildings on Greenland and Iceland.

Oral histories called the Icelandic sagas depict a Viking presence in the Americas. Written down centuries later, they describe a leader named Leif Erikson and a settlement called Vinland, as well as violent and peaceful interactio­ns with the local peoples, including capturing enslaved people.

The 1021 date roughly correspond­s to the saga accounts, Dee said, adding: “Thus it begs the question, how much of the rest of the saga adventures are true?”

 ?? Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo ?? The Icelandic sagas depict a Viking presence in North America, led by Leif Erikson in a place called Vinland.
Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo The Icelandic sagas depict a Viking presence in North America, led by Leif Erikson in a place called Vinland.

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