We report on the earliest archaeological evidence from the Faroe Islands, placing human colonization in the 4th–6th centuries AD, at least 300–500 years earlier than previously demonstrated archaeologically. The evidence consists of an extensive wind-blown sand deposit containing patches of burnt peat ash of anthropogenic origin. Samples of carbonised barley grains from two of these ash patches produced <sup>14</sup>C dates of two pre-Viking phases within the 4th–6th and late 6th–8th centuries AD. A re-evaluation is required of the nature, scale and timing of the human colonization of the Faroes and the wider North Atlantic region
This article discusses the chronology and nature of the earliest Viking activity, based on a group o...
Humans have made such dramatic and permanent changes to Earth’s landscapes that much of it is now su...
Changes in Faroese land surfaces during the late Holocene reflect intimate interactions between cult...
We report on the earliest archaeological evidence from the Faroe Islands, placing human colonization...
We report on the earliest archaeological evidence from the Faroe Islands, placing human colonization...
The Faroe Islands, a North Atlantic archipelago between Norway and Iceland, were settled by Viking e...
Understanding the chronology of Norse settlement is crucial for deciphering the archaeology of many ...
As an isolated island group lying off the NW. European mainland which was uninhabited until the mid-...
Scandinavians, popularly known as Vikings, began to explore and settle in Europe from the ninth cent...
As an isolated island group lying off the NW. European mainland which was uninhabited until the mid-...
How environmental change affects human settlement is a research question that is becoming increasin...
As an isolated island group lying off the NW European mainland which was uninhabited until the mid-f...
The Norse who settled Greenland mostly did so in two principal regions, referred to as the Eastern S...
From the 18th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Wellington, New Zealand, September 1-5, 2...
We present palaeoenvironmental, geomorphological, archaeological, and place-name data which allow a ...
This article discusses the chronology and nature of the earliest Viking activity, based on a group o...
Humans have made such dramatic and permanent changes to Earth’s landscapes that much of it is now su...
Changes in Faroese land surfaces during the late Holocene reflect intimate interactions between cult...
We report on the earliest archaeological evidence from the Faroe Islands, placing human colonization...
We report on the earliest archaeological evidence from the Faroe Islands, placing human colonization...
The Faroe Islands, a North Atlantic archipelago between Norway and Iceland, were settled by Viking e...
Understanding the chronology of Norse settlement is crucial for deciphering the archaeology of many ...
As an isolated island group lying off the NW. European mainland which was uninhabited until the mid-...
Scandinavians, popularly known as Vikings, began to explore and settle in Europe from the ninth cent...
As an isolated island group lying off the NW. European mainland which was uninhabited until the mid-...
How environmental change affects human settlement is a research question that is becoming increasin...
As an isolated island group lying off the NW European mainland which was uninhabited until the mid-f...
The Norse who settled Greenland mostly did so in two principal regions, referred to as the Eastern S...
From the 18th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Wellington, New Zealand, September 1-5, 2...
We present palaeoenvironmental, geomorphological, archaeological, and place-name data which allow a ...
This article discusses the chronology and nature of the earliest Viking activity, based on a group o...
Humans have made such dramatic and permanent changes to Earth’s landscapes that much of it is now su...
Changes in Faroese land surfaces during the late Holocene reflect intimate interactions between cult...