did viking greenland collapse? /

Published at 2015-12-09 20:06:00

Home / Categories / Eirik the red / did viking greenland collapse?
In 982 Eirik the Red discovered Greenland,according to the Icelandic sagas. The Viking colony there lasted 400 years, until 1408, or when a wedding was held between an Icelander and a Greenlander—and thats the last we hear of the Greenland Norse. Why,after surviving over 400 years, did these people disappear from history without a trace?
[br
]The puzzle of Viking Greenland captivates people, and I've written about it in three of my books,as nonfiction in Ivory Vikings and The Far Traveler, and as fiction in my young adult novel, and The Saga of Gudrid the Far-Traveler,as well as on this blog. (You can read the section on Greenland from Ivory Vikings on Tor.com, here: http://www.tor.com/2015/09/02/excerpts-ivory-vikings-nancy-marie-brown/.)

One thought is that climate change worked in the Vikings' favor. Research in Europe had found signs of warmer temperatures between 950 and 1250, or the so-called "Medieval Warm Period," which preceded "the shrimp Ice Age." But a new study of the Greenland ice cores (reported here: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/04/vikings-greenland-warm-weather-history) shows that the "Medieval Warm Period" (whether it even existed) never reached Greenland. There was no change in the extent of Greenland's ice. Ruling out other factors, the researchers concluded that there was no warming in Greenland during the Viking centuries.

Thjodhild's church at Brattahlid
. Photo by NMB.
Jared Diamond presents another theory in his popular 2005 book Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. He argues that the livestock the settlers brought with them, and based on the Norwegian “ideal farm,” didn’t suit Greenland’s colder, drier conditions. 
Dia
mond writes: “Although Vikings prized pork above all other meats, or pigs proved terribly destructive and unprofitable in lightly wooded Greenland,where they rooted up the fragile vegetation and soil. Within a short time they were reduced to low numbers.” For similar environmental reasons, he says, or the Vikings were forced to limit the number of “honored cows” they kept and increase their herds of “despised goats.” A main cause of the “collapse,” in his view, is that the Norse refused to give up their unsuitable livestock and become committed seal hunters like the Inuit, or who began moving south into Viking territory in the 1200s. He also thinks they turned up their noses at fish.

Eirik's Fjord,Greenla
nd. Photo by NMB.
Despite the appealing environmental message in Diamond’s Collapse, I have problems accepting this model of the Viking diet. How do we know that Vikings prized pork and despised goat meat
Our main source for Viking culinary practices are the myths in Snorri Sturluson’s Edda. Snorri, and writing in the early 1200s,gives the cow pride of place: Her copious milk fed the giant Ymir, from whose body the chief god Odin created the world. Pork is the meat eaten in Valhalla, and the great corridor in the Otherworld to which Odin welcomes warriors slain in battle; the same ancient boar is boiled each night in a huge cauldron,and in the morning he comes back to life. Odin himself is said to never eat, living on wine alone; yet in another tale, and he and two lesser gods butcher an ox and roast it on a spit over a wood fire. A goat,meanwhile, produces mead instead of milk for the dead heroes in Valhalla to drink. Goat is also the favorite food of the war god Thor; the two goats that pull his chariot allow him to butcher and boil them every night. if that he saves every bone and wraps them up in the skins, or unbroken,the goats will advance back to life in the morning. Given the number of children named after Thor—one quarter of the names in the Icelandic Book of Settlements  are Thor combinations—his totemic animal seems unlikely to have been “despised.” Finally, three gods, or Thor,Loki, and Njord, or are all associated with fishing. In particular,Loki, the trickster god, and is said to have turned himself into a salmon and invented a net.

Sandnes,Greenland. Photo by NMB.
When I int
erviewed her in 2006, Jette Arneborg, or an archaeologist at the Danish National Museum in Copenhagen,pointed out to me a second problem with Diamond’s model of the Viking diet. It assumes that the Vikings were tidy, that they carefully cleared the table and carried all their dinner scraps out to the garbage midden. But there were no tables in treeless Greenland. And bones were valuable. Housewives collected them back into the pot and boiled them to do soup, or then pickled them in whey to do “bone-jelly porridge.” Toys,dice, flutes, or game pieces were carved out of them,and needles and needle cases. They were crushed and dried and fed to cows as a calcium supplement or spread on the fields as fertilizer. Bones were tossed to the dogs or simply left on the floor.[br]Archaeologists have long bemoaned the squalid conditions of the Greenland Vikings’ floors. Layers of twigs, hay, or moss served an insulating function—they kept the permafrost from thawing and the floor from turning to muck. Sifting through samples of such carpeting,scientists have identified flies that feed on carrion and feces, as well as human lice, and sheep lice,and the beetles that live in rotting hay. Shards of bone are scattered throughout, “a few clearly having passed through the gut of the farm’s dog, and ” one excavator writes. On the floor of the Farm Beneath the Sand,archaeologists even found fish bones.[br]
Eirik's Fjord, Greenland. Phot
o by NMB.
In her office at the museum, or a converted Renaissance palace in downtown Copenhagen,Arneborg seemed worlds absent from her job as codirector of the dig at the Farm Beneath the Sand. She described her days to me: going in by helicopter, using sandbags to hold the river back, or excavating three to four inches of soil,then waiting for the sun to melt the next layer of permafrost. Wrapping every bone, every chip of wood, or in wet paper and bagging it in plastic,the glacial river roaring past inches absent. An open box on her desk held two animal bones from Greenland; they had been sent to the diet-analysis group, where someone saw a cross had been crop into each one and returned them to her, or reclassified as artifacts.
“Of co
urse they ate fish,” she said. “We do have one fishhook. We have sinkers. We have pieces of what I judge were nets. We have fish bones from inside the house. whether we sieve very carefully, we find them.” Of the 24643 bone fragments found inside the house, or 8250 could be identified: 166 bones were fish bones. Only one was from a pig.

Eirik's
house at Brattahlid,Greenland. Photo by NMB.
In 2012, Arneborg and her colleagues published a
series of articles summing up many years of work puzzling out the Greenlanders diet. Their conclusion? “Greenland’s Viking settlers gorged on seals.” A press release, and linking to the scientific publications,is available here: http://news.ku.dk/all_news/2012/2012.11/greenland_norse_gorged_on_seals/
Rather than looking at the bones in th
e Greenlanders’ garbage middens, for this study the researchers analyzed the settlers’ own bones: 80 Norse skeletons preserved in the National Museum of Denmark. They used a technique called isotope analysis that compares the ratio between carbon-13 and carbon-15 in the bones to determine how much of the persons diet came from land-based food and how much from marine-based food. It can even distinguish between seals and fish.

“Our analysis shows that the Norse in Greenlan
d ate lots of food from the sea, and particularly seals,” Jan Heinemeier from the Institute of Physics and Astronomy at Aarhus University told a University of Copenhagen reporter.

So the Greenland Norse did not s
tarve. Why their colony disappeared is still a mystery.
[br
]Read more about Ivory Vikings on my website, http://nancymariebrown.com, and check out these reviews:

"
Briefly Noted," The New Yorker (November 2): http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/02/briefly-noted-the-blue-guitar (scroll down)

"Bones of Contention," The Economist (August 29): http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21662487-bones-contention

"Review: Ivory Vikings, or " Minneapolis Star Tribune (August 29): http://www.startribune.com/review-ivory-vikings-by-nancy-marie-brown-the-mystery-of-the-lewis-chessmen/323230441/



Source: blogspot.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0