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  1. The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman by Nancy Marie Brown, 2007-10-09

61. Index_of_authors
Schools in small settlements in greenland The impact on the Hansen, LI (1984)Trade and markets in Northern Fennoscandinavia AD1550-1750.
http://www.imv.uit.no/english/science/publicat/actaborealia/index_of_authors.htm
ACTA BOREALIA A NORDIC JOURNAL OF CIRCUMPOLAR SOCIETIES Index of authors Aikio, M. (1989) The Kven and cultural linguistic pluralism. Acta Borealia 6(1):86-97. Albrethsen, S.E. (1989) Archaeological investigations of 17th century whaling on Svalbard. Acta Borealia 6(1):43-51. Allen, K. (1988) look Bartolotta, K. Antilla, S. and E. Torp. (1996) Environment, Adjustment and Private Economic Strategies in Reindeer Pastoralism: Combining Game Theory with Participatory Action Theory. Acta Borealia 13(2):91-108. Arneborg, J. (1991) The Niquusat excavations reconsidered. Acta Borealia 8(1):82-92. Barre, K. de la (1987) Strategies in northern development in Canada since the late 1960's. Acta Borealia 4(1-2):91-118. Berg, R. (1994-1995) A Norwegian Policy of the North before World War I? Acta Borealia 11(1-2):5-18. Berliner, P. (1987) Small-scale schooling and national development. Schools in small settlements in Greenland: The impact on the opportunities of adolescents concerning work and/or education. Acta Borealia 4(1-2):137-146. Bertelsen, R. (1984) Farm mounds of the Harstad area. Quantitative investigations of accumulation characteristics. Acta Borealia 1(1):7-25.

62. Plurabelle - Scandinavia
Balchen, Bernt; Ford, Corey War Below Zero The Battle for greenland. Uppsala Swedish Archaeological Society,1951 197. vols 1 - 6, approx 300p each,
http://www.plurabelle.co.uk/catalog/90.html
The Kitchen Brew your own catalogue via our multiple subject search! The Catalogues
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Scandinavia
154 books in list (last updated 12 May 2005) Koht, Helvdan: Norway Neutral and Invaded. Hutchinson1941. 224p red cloth with black lettering to sunned spine, little used first edition, pages clean with frontispiece, VG. Price in Euro 26.010000, but credit card transactions in pounds sterling only PKM 83736 Wilson, Dorothy: The Welfare State in Sweden. Heinemann1979. 171p hardback with yellow and blue laminated jacket, little used first edition, pages clean with charts, sources and index, VG. Price in Euro 122.850000, but credit card transactions in pounds sterling only PKM 83621 Largerkvist, Par: The Dwarf. With an Introduction by Quentin Crewe. Quartet Encounters1986. 175p orange paperback with card cover, pencil inscription, pages clean with publisher catalogue, VG. Price in Euro 18.060000, but credit card transactions in pounds sterling only PKM 82219 Ibsen, Henrik:

63. Kvartärgeologiska Avd., Lunds Universitet
Pirkko Ukkonen, Department of archaeology and Ancient History, Historical Osteology, Examples from West greenland”. Torsdag 7 februari, kl. 16.15
http://www.geol.lu.se/kvg/semprogt.htm

Lunds universitet
Tidigare seminarieprogram Seminarieprogram februari - maj 2005 Torsdag 3 februari 15.15, Rodinia (rum 243)
Peter Riisager , Quaternary Sciences, GeoBiosphere Science Centre, Lund: "Paleomagnetism in the North Atlantic: examples from Greenland and Iceland" Onsdag 16 februari 15.15, CGB-seminarium och "Tage Nilsson-föreläsning", Pangea (rum 229)
Kathy J Willis , Oxford Long-term Ecology Laboratory, Oxford: "The Quaternary Ice Ages: an important time for diversification and speciation or impoverishment and extinction?" Torsdag 17 februari 15.15, Rodinia (rum 243)
Anders Lindahl , Quaternary Sciences, GeoBiosphere Science Centre, Lund: "What is the Laboratory for Ceramic Research? Presentation of a fairly unknown activity at the Geology Dept" Torsdag 10 mars 15.15, Rodinia (rum 243)
Daniel Conley , DMU, Roskilde: "The ups and downs and ins and outs of biogenic silica" Onsdag 16 mars 15.15, CGB-seminarium, Pangea (rum 229)
Peter Cox , Hadley Centre, British Meteorological Office: "Global carbon cycling and predictions of future climate"

64. The American-Scandinavian Foundation
New views of Vikings are a direct result of recent archaeological research, The most extensive studies were in greenland, where the mysterious
http://www.amscan.org/viking.html
Join our e-list:
The American - Scandinavian Foundation

at Scandinavia House
58 Park Avenue
(between 37th and 38th St.)
New York, New York 10016
Telephone: 212-879-9779
E-mail: info@amscan.org
Vikings Arrive In America - Again!
by William W. Fitzhugh
The discovery of the New World by Leif Eriksson one thousand years ago will be celebrated this year when Vikings: The North Atlantic Saga opens at the Smithsonian lnstitution's National Museum of Natural History on April 29, 2000. Eight years after the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' first voyage to the Caribbean, the exhibition seeks to educate the North American public about an earlier episode of European history in the New World by focusing attention on the contributions made by the Vikings and their Norse descendants, who continue to inhabit North Atlantic regions into the modern day. It turns out that educating the public about the Vikings and their relevance to North America is more necessary than one might imagine. North Americans know surprisingly little about this subject, even though it is one of the most popular topics taught in secondary schools (right after the history of Ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome, and American Indians). What little is presented about Vikings in North American schools only serves to reinforce the stereotypic view of Vikings as crazed warriors bent on mayhem and destruction as they careen about the coasts of Europe in their "dragon-ships," harrying defenseless monasteries, laying siege to towns and cities, and carrying off plunder and slaves to their homelands in Scandinavia. This image has been reinforced by movies, such as the famous Kirk Douglas and Tony Curtis film

65. Natural History Magazine | Feature
But the chain of communities connecting mainland scandinavia with the New World Archaeological finds in the Orkneys show that early Vikings successfully
http://www.naturalhistorymag.com/features/1000_vikings.html
October 2000
What went wrong with the Scandinavian westward expansion?
By Thomas H. McGovern and Sophia Perdikaris
40-foot representation of a Viking ocean-going boat (knarr) constructed over several weeks by the Exhibitions staff of the Museum.
Photo by Denis Finnin, AMNH. At first, the settlers of southern Iceland replicated this pastoral ideal quite closely, but by the eleventh or early twelfth century, they, along with their pigs and goats, must have used up much of the forest. This may be the main reason that pigs, which need woodlands to thrive, drop out of the archaeological record at this time, as do goats, which probably were not as efficient as sheep at turning grass into milk. The relative numbers of cattle also decline in favor of sheep, probably because cows require better quality pasture. The old expectations and practices did not die so easily, however. When Erik the Red and his contemporaries settled Greenland, they sought to establish, wherever possible, not only the modified eleventh-century Icelandic farmstead but the original Scandinavian farmstead, rich in pigs and cattle. This simply did not work over the long term. Where did these bright, ambitious, hard-working settlers go wrong?

66. Bibliography
Hall Richard, 1990, Viking Age archaeology in Brirain and Ireland Shire There is also some information on Scandinavian finds, although most of them
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~eowyn/Longship/references.html
Bibliography for Longships, Vikings and Related Subjects
This is a collection of references to books, articles, etc. that have been recommended to us as sources for material on the Viking era and/or on Longships. The Longship Company, Ltd. makes no claim as to the validity or availability of any of these resources and presents them only as an example of what is out there. Comments by the source of the information are included. They are alphabetized within the following categories.
Technical, Ships
  • Atkinson, Ian, 1979, The Viking Ships , Cambridge Topic Book. Cambridge University Press. Excellent overview of the evolution of Viking ships, their construction, handling, history, sea battles. Description of the voyage of the Viking.
  • Brogger, Anton Wilhelm and Haakon Shetelig, 1951, The Viking Ships, Their Ancestry and Evolution , Dreyers Forlag, Oslo, Norway. Good descriptions of how the Oseburg, Tune and Gokstad ships were constructed and furnished. Photographs of the ships in situ and reconstructed. Photographs of artifacts found on the ships. Drawings of motifs carved into the ships or their furnishings.
  • Neers, Niels; Breakwater Books Ltd.

67. H-SKAND May Conference
of the Churches in greenland. Transl by Stephen Mitchell.......Scandinavian 151 The Viking World and the Vinland Question A
http://www.h-net.org/~skand/disclist/cnfmay5.htm
THE VIKING WORLD AND THE VINLAND QUESTION
Course at Harvard University
Stephen Mitchell
This course, "The Viking World and the Vinland Question," is the successor to a slightly different course I used to teach here at Harvard that focussed more strictly on the period 800 to 1100. As you will see on the syllabus, in addition to the more obvious issues associated with the Viking Age, this course looks to examine the "ongoing reinterpretation of this era in later periods.
Course syllabus
Scandinavian 151: " The Viking World and the Vinland Question Prof. Stephen Mitchell 69 Dunster Street; 5-4788
I. Description:
"Reviews the historical events in northern Europe A.D. 800 to A.D. 1100, and the literary legacy that resulted from these activities; special attention paid to the development of the North Atlantic colonies, particularly those in Greenland. The evidence for 'viking' activity in the New World (e.g., the Vinland sagas, the archaeological record)- and the fabrication of such evidence (e.g., the Kensington rune stone, the 'viking' city of Norumbega)- carefully considered."
II. Objectives:

68. Medieval North European Spindle Whorls
Many hundreds of spindle whorls survive from the Scandinavian Middle Ages. Settlement in greenland, Archäologische TexilfundeArchaeological Textiles
http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~capriest/spindles.html
This document began life as an owner's manual for my husband's handmade reproduction Viking Age spindles. Little did I know how hungry people were for this sort of information! This document is a work in progress. It is provided as is without any express or implied warranties. While every effort has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the information contained, the author assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~capriest/spindles.html
Medieval North European Spindles and Whorls
Introduction
This document discusses spindle whorls and shafts found throughout the areas Scandinavians lived in during the Middle Ages (800-1500 CE). Many hundreds of spindle whorls survive from the Scandinavian Middle Ages. In the Viking Age they were frequently buried with women, and throughout the period many were lost or discarded at settlement sites, only to be dug up centuries later.
Materials
The surviving whorls are made of many different materials: amber, antler (elk), bone (cattle, pig), clay, coral, glass, metal (iron, lead, lead alloy), and wood (oak). Many types of local stone were also used, such as chalk, limestone, mudstone, sandstone, schist, siltstone, slate, and soapstone. In Norway and Iceland, where soapstone can be quarried, and in the areas such as Scotland, Greenland, and Newfoundland that were influenced by Norway and Iceland, more soapstone whorls survive than whorls of any other material. Often soapstone whorls were made from reused fragments of cooking vessels.

69. Nordic Culture > Misconceptions About The Vikings - Scandinavica.com
They populated Iceland and greenland, they temporarely settled in north America, The Scandinavian Shop Viking! a complete selection of the Sagas and
http://www.scandinavica.com/culture/history/vikings.htm
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Newsletter Do you want to keep informed of our updates on Nordic culture? Click here to read more... Misconceptions about the Vikings
The Vikings are the most famous Scandinavians, but what do we know about the Vikings? Here are the three most common misconceptions about the Vikings.
What is the difference between Norse and Viking?
"Norse" is the name we give to the Germanic tribes who emigrated and settled in Scandinavia around the year 1000 BC. In the 8th century AD, the Norse started building fine and very versatile ships that allowed them to travel long distances. This was the beginning of the Viking age.
The Norse society was composed by farmers, slaves and chieftains or aristocrats. Helped by the speed of their ships, some of the farmers and chieftains would become pirates during the summer and would go to raid and pillage foreign villages. These were the Vikings. "Viking" was a verb used to describe a temporary lifestyle. Most Norsemen would stay in their villages for all their lifes, but some young and adventurous farmers would go "viking" or raiding for some months or for some years to earn their living on piracy.

70. ScienceDaily -- Browse Topics: Society/History/By_Time_Period/Middle_Ages/Viking
Search Land, Sea And Home The Society For Medieval archaeology Monograph Series The Viking Legacy About the Scandinavian Vikings and Viking ships.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/directory/Society/History/By_Time_Period/Middle_Ages
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71. At The Museums: Three Cheers For The Vikings
who is writing a novel, Bibrau s Saga, about women in the Norse Greenlandsettlements. Click here for archaeology s list of current exhibitions.
http://www.archaeology.org/0007/abstracts/museum.html
Your browser does not support javascript At the Museums: Three Cheers for the Vikings Volume 53 Number 4, July/August 2000 by Judith Lindbergh When most people think of the Vikings, savage, horned-helmeted warriors and blond-braided maidens generally come to mind. Seemingly invincible in the annals of their Christianized victims, the Vikings explored, conquered, and exploited lands as far as their ships could carry them. They penetrated Russia, following waterways to the Black, Caspian, and eastern Mediterranean seas. They tormented the British Isles, terrorized Paris, and defaced a marble lion at the Greek port of Piraeus. But it was in the west, at the hands of Native North Americans and finally, more subtly, at the mercy of unpredictable changes in a fragile Arctic environment, that the Norse met a most poignant and unexpected fate. Drawing on archaeological and environmental evidence uncovered in the last 30 years, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's groundbreaking exhibit, Vikings: The North Atlantic Saga

72. Fieldwork: NORSEC
NABO includes 40 research centers in North America, the EU, and scandinavia. Woollett s archaeological and ethnographic fieldwork has since been
http://web.gc.cuny.edu/Anthropology/field_norsec.html
The CUNY Northern Science
and Education Center (NORSEC)
CUNY graduate and undergraduate students excavate one of the oldest sites in North Iceland.
The Northern Science and Education Center at the City University of New York, a collaborative effort involving four college campuses and The Graduate Center, has its headquarters at Brooklyn College's department of Anthropology and Archaeology. Even before its formal opening in Spring 2001, NORSEC members organized international meetings, planned the 2000 international field school in Iceland, organized a session for the Society for American Archaeology meetings in 2000, and involved students in cutting-edge research. The circumpolar north includes not only the high arctic, but also the cold but productive and historically critical waters of the North Pacific and North Atlantic, the majority of the territory of the rapidly changing Russian Federation, and a large part of the Scandinavian world. In recent years, the circumpolar north has moved from being a zone of military confrontation during the cold war to a center for large-scale international cooperation. As concerns about global environmental changes deepen, there has been widespread scientific recognition that the north is an essential area for monitoring major changes in temperature, marine and atmospheric circulation, greenhouse gases, pollution spread, and ozone depletion.
Changes in North Atlantic climate and sea ice distribution are recognized as key elements in anticipated global change over the

73. Northern Lands: Greenland, Newfoundland And Labrador
This afternoon, call at Nuuk, capital of greenland and the country s political, After exploring some of the archaeological artifacts that have been
http://www.smithsonianjourneys.org/cruises_intl/090205northernlands.asp
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74. ARCHPORT: Viking Colonies' Icy 'Pompeii'
Today, it is called the Viking Pompeii in the Scandinavian press. This isa case study in the integration of archaeology and environmental data, said
http://sagitta.ci.uc.pt/mhonarchive/archport/msg00191.html
Índice por assuntos Lista archport Índice cronológico Anterior por data Anterior por assunto MENSAGEM Nº de Próxima por assunto Próxima por data
ARCHPORT: Viking Colonies' Icy 'Pompeii'
To archport@ci.uc.pt
Subject ARCHPORT: Viking Colonies' Icy 'Pompeii'
From "Paulo Monteiro" < paulo_monteiro@hotmail.com
Date Mon, 14 May 2001 11:42:18
http://www.hotmail.com
Mensagem anterior por data:
ARCHPORT: Ancient farmers were goat-herders
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75. Leif Ericsson - Scandinavian Explorer Leif The Lucky
Leif also governed greenland and was a devout convert to Christianity. The discovery in 1960 of evidence supporting a Scandinavian settlement in L Anse
http://historymedren.about.com/library/who/blwwleif.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Medieval History Vikings in America Leif Ericsson - Scandinavian Explorer Leif the Lucky Homework Help Medieval History Essentials Getting Started ... Help w(' ');zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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Leif Ericsson
Explorer
Ruler (Governor)
Scandinavia: Greenland
We have no accurate dates for the birth and death of Leif "the Lucky" Ericsson (also spelled Ericson or Erikson; in Norwegian, Leiv Eriksson den Hepne; in Old Norse, Leifr Eriksson), but we do know that around the year 1000 C.E. he made a historic journey to North America. The second son of Erik the Red , as a young man Leif Ericsson visited Norway, where he converted to Christianity. He was charged with returning to Greenland and converting others there, but instead he sailed further west and is believed to have landed somewhere in Nova Scotia. It was once thought that he accidentally sailed off course, but Leif was more likely deliberately seeking the land that Bjarni Herjulfsson had spotted some years earlier. He spent a year in North America before returning home to Greenland, where he served as governor and preached Christianity. Leif is often referred to as a Viking, but it's interesting to note that he lived at a time when the Viking Age was drawing to a close, and he was a devout Christian rather than a follower of the Norse pagan gods. However, he certainly displayed the Viking spirit of adventure and exploration.

76. Bachelors Classes
Introduction to basic concepts, theories, and methods of archaeology with Cultural history and variations of Scandinavian peoples including their
http://anthro.uaa.alaska.edu/Degree_Programs/Bach_Classes.htm
Bachelors Classes Dept. Home
ANTH A101 Introduction to Anthropology 3 CR
Contact Hours: 3 +
Course Attributes: GER Social Sciences
Special Note: Recommended for majors and non-majors.
Introduction to fundamentals of the four subfields of anthropology: archaeology, cultural anthropology, biological anthropology and anthropological linguistics. The course introduces basic ideas, methods and findings of anthropology. ANTH A200 Natives of Alaska 3 CR
Contact Hours: 3 +
Course Attributes: GER Social Sciences
Introduction to culture and history of Alaska Natives. Includes environmental settings, linguistic subdivisions, traditional sociocultural organization and subsistence patterns, contact with non-Native groups, and contemporary issues. ANTH A202 Cultural Anthropology 3 CR
Contact Hours: 3 +
Course Attributes: GER Social Sciences Introduction to the methods, theories, and fundamental concepts for the study of cultural systems. Includes social relationships, economic organization, political systems, symbols and beliefs. Serves as foundation for more specialized courses in cultural anthropology. ANTH A205 Biological Anthropology 3 CR Contact Hours: 3 + Introduction to human behavior, genetics, classification and evolution with comparisons to other primates. Examines distribution, morphological and physiological adaptations of human populations.

77. Theses From Uppsala University : 2909 - The Viking Way
However, little archaeological or historical research has been done to explore The societies of Viking Age scandinavia spanned a complex border zone
http://publications.uu.se/theses/abstract.xsql?isbn=91-505-1626-9

78. VIKING
Scandinavian immigrants of Wisconsin and Minnesota identified with the Vikingfarmers mentioned Monday Written sources and archaeology Page 150155;
http://web.clas.ufl.edu/users/fcurta/VIKING.html
Department of History
EUH-3121
THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES:
THE VIKING EXPERIENCE
Professor: Dr. Florin Curta
Office: 202 Keene-Flint Hall
Office hours: WF 2:00-4:00 or by appointment
Phone: 392-0271, ext. 240
E-mail: fcurta@history.ufl.edu
Class will meet MWF: 12:50-1:40 in LIT 121
THE COURSE SYLLABUS
Fall 2002
Course description
TEXTBOOKS
  • Birgit and Peter Sawyer, Medieval Scandinavia. From Conversion to Reformation, circa 800-1500 . Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993 [hereafter Sawyer ]; on two-hour reserve in Library West Chronicles of the Vikings. Records, Memorials and Myths . Ed. by R. I. Page. Toronto/Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 1995 [hereafter Page ]; on two-hour reserve in Library West The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings . Ed. by Peter Sawyer. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, 1997[hereafter Oxford ]; on two-hour reserve in Library West (optional) Medieval Scandinavia. An Encyclopedia . Ed. by Phillip Pulsiano. New York: Garland, 1993 [hereafter Pulsiano ]; in the non-circulating Reference section in

79. IPY: International Polar Year
the initial Inuit movement to Arctic Canada and greenland whether this was Archaeological fieldwork at selected sites in Baffin Island and Labrador
http://www.ipy.org/development/eoi/details.php?id=694

80. Scandinavian And Scottish Ice Sheets
The Scandinavian and Scottish glaciation in our view came about between 91600and 50600 years ago when the North Pole was centered in the greenland Sea.
http://www.intersurf.com/~chalcedony/Beech2.html
Paleoclimatic Reconstructions
And Scandinavian and Scottish Ice Sheets
"When the Sky Fell" is remarkable for a book allegedly discussing the complicated history of the last "Ice Age" in the paucity of paleonvironmental and geologic evidence cited in this book. A couple of striking exceptions are paleoclimatic reconstructions and comments about the glaciation of Scandinavia made at "When the Sky Fell" web site and in the book and comments about Scottish geology made in the book. Both are commented on below. Re: Atlantis: Is it in Antarctica? Author: Heinrich Date: 1999/03/27 Message-ID: NNTP-Posting-Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 18:05:09 CST Newsgroups: sci.archaeology Newsgroups: sci.archaeology Subject: Re: Atlantis: Is it in Antarctica? In article Return to Wildside Index Page Return to Home Page Send email to
Paul V. Heinrich
Version 4.0
Dec 14, 2001

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