Author Topic: Can Oceanic Archaeologist Finally Zero in on Elusive Lost Viking Colony?  (Read 388 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest
 7 March, 2018 - 22:42 ashley cowie
Can Oceanic Archaeologist Finally Zero in on Elusive Lost Viking Colony?


An archaeologist believes she is one step closer to finding a “lost Viking settlement” in North America, which would be one of the most significant discoveries this century, so far.

Birgitta Wallace is a senior archaeologist emerita with Parks Canada who has extensively researched the movements of Vikings in North America, and in a recent essay in Canada's History magazine she talked of her lifelong search for “Hóp,” a Viking settlement mentioned in ancient Norse sagas. Centuries old sea-tales offer natural and geographic clues to Hóp’s whereabouts, and it was said to have had “wild grapes, abundant salmon and inhabitants who made canoes out of animal hides.”

http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/can-oceanic-archaeologist-finally-zero-elusive-lost-viking-colony-009712