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The Vikings.
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Blond, brawny and brutal.
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They plundered and pillaged across continents
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in the days before the Norman Conquest.
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- Whoa! That is a sword cut into someone's head.
- A sword cut mark.
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Their longships wreaked havoc across the North Atlantic...
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but how far did these seafarers voyage?
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The Vikings are still a mystery.
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Now I want to shine a light into the Vikings' dark past.
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I'm joining forces
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with world-renowned satellite archaeologist Dr Sarah Parcak.
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Together we'll search for the greatest prize
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in Viking archaeology.
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It screams, "Please excavate me!"
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SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
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The Vikings' own stories, the sagas,
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reveal they explored deep into North America
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some 500 years before Columbus.
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If this is a Viking site, you've just discovered
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the furthest known western point
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of the entire Viking expansion.
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We'll hunt for those lost Vikings
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and I'll discover how they voyaged further
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than any European had ever done before.
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Lovely! That reindeer droppings are really cutting through there.
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On this journey, I'll uncover
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just how closely related to the Vikings we are.
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I hate to admit, but we are probably the same species as the British.
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And they weren't just Hells Angels,
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they were shrewd entrepreneurs.
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Mesmerising, isn't it?
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We're setting out to prove that they were the first Europeans
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to settle in the New World 1,000 years ago.
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This is a very good day indeed!
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It would just be really good to have the dates work out.
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So, are you ready?
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Lerwick on the Shetland Islands.
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Every January, it hosts Up Helly Aa.
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One of the most colourful celebrations of our Viking past.
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RAUCOUS CHEERING
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You know what? When you see these big, tough men
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walking down the street in glittering armour,
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they do convey an amazing impression.
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- Three cheers for the Guizer Jarl. Hip, hip!
- CROWD:
- HOORAY!
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Scary!
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THEY CHEER
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The Vikings arrived here in their longships 1,200 years ago.
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BAGPIPE MUSIC
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They famously plundered and pillaged,
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but they also settled much of Britain
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and explored the North Atlantic.
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They left powerful marks on our identity
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and our gene pool.
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We are more Viking here than Scottish.
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Aaagh! I know who I am.
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Yet much of what we know about them
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still comes from comic books rather than history books.
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No real Viking ever wore a winged or horned helmet.
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If even our most familiar image of the Vikings is wrong,
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what other myths are there left to explode?
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I'm heading to Copenhagen, the heart of the Viking homeland,
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to start my quest to discover how far beyond our Shetland friends
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Viking power extended.
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Waiting for me is an old Norse saga named after one of the Vikings'
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most heroic and notorious characters.
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So, this is the Saga of Erik the Red
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and this is the oldest surviving text that we have of this saga.
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Dr Emily Lethbridge is an expert on the sagas,
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the Vikings' own stories, written down by their descendants.
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So, this is 700 years old, this book?
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SHE SPEAKS OLD NORSE
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This saga tells of a voyage by Erik the Red's son, Leif,
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to a place west of Greenland.
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The sagas describe the discovery of this country
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and it's an incredibly lush place, absolutely teeming with wildlife.
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So that's how, according to this saga, North America was discovered.
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So, this is hundreds of years before Christopher Columbus,
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- here it is, in this manuscript, right here.
- Yeah!
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And that's not all.
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The first people to explore this place they named Vinland
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may actually have been British.
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SAGA IS SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
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A couple of Scots are sent ashore to explore the land
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and they come back, one of them with a handful of self-sown wheat
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and the other with a vine in their hand.
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Wild vines. Is that where they get the name Vinland from?
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That's one interpretation, yes.
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So, where in North America could Vinland have been?
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In 1960, at a place called L'Anse aux Meadows
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on the northern tip of Newfoundland,
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archaeologists made the remarkable discovery of a Viking transit camp.
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It contained Viking hallmarks - their long houses
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and evidence of metalworking...
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..but the sagas don't just talk about one camp.
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They describe other settlements elsewhere.
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So, what does it say about other stories in here?
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I mean, there must be a lot more to find out in North America.
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There could well be, because the sagas describe not only these guys
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stopping off in one place, but stopping off in a number of places
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and they were there for several years.
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They had a whole new world to explore.
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So, there may be some archaeology out there?
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There may be some archaeology out there.
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I'm hooked.
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Scots amongst the first Europeans in the New World -
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and then there's the promise of more sites in America.
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But how to follow in the footsteps of Erik the Red and his son Leif
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and find those lost Vikings?
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The answer might lie in an unlikely location - Birmingham, Alabama...
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..in the lab of the world-renowned space archaeologist Dr Sarah Parcak.
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Sarah has pioneered the use of satellites
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to make ground-breaking archaeological discoveries...
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from space.
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She uses infrared imagery to show up the differences between desert sand
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and building material beneath the surface.
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And lo and behold - the map of a whole city.
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She's already uncovered lost pyramids in Egypt...
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..and together we found the fabled lighthouse
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of Ancient Rome's harbour.
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That is awesome!
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Now, Sarah's joining me on the trail of the Vikings -
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but this is uncharted territory for her.
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After all, her speciality is Ancient Egypt.
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This project is my biggest challenge yet -
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I've been working in Egypt for the last 15 years -
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but then, thinking about the Vikings,
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you have a vast empire across a vast ocean.
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Also, the Vikings lived in farmsteads.
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It was much more ephemeral, you know -
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they simply didn't leave a lot behind.
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Sarah will have to adapt her methods.
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Unlike in Egypt, she'll be relying on subtle differences
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in surface vegetation that only hint at what may lie beneath.
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All from a camera 383 miles above the earth's surface.
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I can't wait to find out what Sarah's discovered.
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She's been searching all the places the Vikings went
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across the North Atlantic -
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Scotland, Iceland and Greenland...
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..but the Holy Grail is North America.
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We've really been focusing our efforts
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on the eastern seaboard of Canada.
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If you find something on the eastern seaboard of Canada,
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that would be huge.
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So, let's go into Newfoundland.
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Right now, the only known Norse site in all of North America
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is at the northern tip of Newfoundland, at L'Anse aux Meadows.
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So, if you believe the sagas, that might just have been a transit camp.
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That's right.
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Would they have had something more permanent somewhere else?
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Where are these other places?
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Over the last couple of months, we've spent a lot of time
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looking along the entire Labrador coast.
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We looked up every single river.
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It's like looking for a needle in a million haystacks.
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Tens and tens of thousands of square kilometres.
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We've even looked along the coastline of Maine
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into Massachusetts. So, we've looked everywhere...
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Come on! Show me!
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..and this very interesting site appeared in Newfoundland.
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So, when we were doing initial processing,
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all I saw was a dark stain.
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You can see this slightly darker area right here, that's all I saw...
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- OK.
- ..and I almost discarded it.
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But when we processed that imagery...
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..that rectilinear structure shows up very clearly here.
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You can see the outline of what looks like a long house better here,
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but you can see actual internal divisions.
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- It's 22 metres long and seven metres wide.
- Mm.
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The exact same size as the long houses at L'Anse aux Meadows.
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No way!
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This is the first site we've had in 55 years
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that merits closer examination and excavation.
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I mean - its size, its shape - it screams, "Please, excavate me!"
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If this is a Viking site, you've just discovered
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the furthest known western point of the entire Viking expansion.
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When you visit Sarah's lab for the day,
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it feels like you've got a front row seat at the making of history.
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We've seen the data on the big screen
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and now I can't wait to put my boots on and get out there on the ground.
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It's now down to Sarah and I to prove the Vikings put down roots
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even further west than anyone has ever thought.
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First of all, Sarah needs to convince the authorities
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to let her dig.
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So her team will carry out surveying work at the new site,
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while Sarah tests out her satellite technology
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by gathering evidence of the Viking route
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across the North Atlantic from Britain to North America.
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Meanwhile, I'm going to work out how they managed to travel so far west
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1,000 years ago.
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Now the hard work begins,
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when we get this beast up the top of the mast.
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Fast.
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Free.
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Fast.
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Free.
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I'm getting a crash course in Viking sailing
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on an exact replica of an 11th century ship.
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There is one concession to modern convenience.
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That's pretty heavy work.
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- Yeah, you are just halfway, so...
- Halfway. OK.
- Yeah.
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It's getting heavier.
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The advent of the square sail at the start of the Viking era
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meant these people were no longer confined to the shoreline.
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They were now masters of the open oceans.
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I've sailed my whole life
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and I've even sailed through these waters before,
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but I've never been on a Viking ship -
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and this kind of ship is so iconic.
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This is where the whole history
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of European maritime exploration begins.
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It is absolutely beautiful.
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With a 15-strong crew,
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ships like this would carry 20 tonnes of cargo,
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including goats and cows, up to 2,000 miles.
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It's a lot more responsive than you'd think, looking at it.
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There's wind in the sail, it's responding to the tiller here,
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it's responding to the sea, it's great!
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And you realise it might be over 1,000-year-old technology,
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but it's still fit for purpose today.
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To get a flavour of how the Vikings survived long voyages
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without fresh food,
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Captain Esben Jessen is introducing me to the medieval equivalent
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of astronaut grub.
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We have a variety here of smoked lamb, it's actually smoked
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over reindeer droppings, so it has a little tang to it.
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OK, here we go.
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Lovely!
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That reindeer droppings are really cutting through there, very nice.
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It's good.
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- And then we a have dried cod.
- That, I can smell -
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- even in a big wind on this foredeck, I can smell it.
- Yes, it's amazing.
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- it's just fantastic.
- It's amazing.
- It's a little chewy.
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Oh, yeah! It's like gnawing on a bit of canvas.
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But then when you smoke it, or you dry it,
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or as these two pickled herrings, here, then this would actually,
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it could last for weeks, or months, even.
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But the Vikings didn't just design ships to ply the open seas.
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They also built them to attack
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when and where they wanted.
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So, the interesting thing about this
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is that it's a really flexible construction.
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At Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, boat builder Martin Rodevad Dael
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shows me what made the longship the ultimate attack weapon.
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- So, if you sort of move it, you can see that it's really...
- Whoa!
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..move it a little bit, you can tell how...
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- That's amazing!
- ..the whole thing is...
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- The whole thing is just twisting like this.
- ..twisting.
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You can just see the ripples going down the hull there.
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Fast and flexible to ride the rollers of the North Atlantic,
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with a shallow keel to penetrate any waterway and land on any beach,
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this was the Panzer tank of the Dark Ages...
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00:15:29,800 --> 00:15:33,240
..and at the end of the 8th century, it began to wreak havoc
253
00:15:33,240 --> 00:15:36,360
as the Vikings swept west out of their homeland
254
00:15:36,360 --> 00:15:39,240
into the turbulent Atlantic in search of riches.
255
00:15:41,080 --> 00:15:45,720
The first place ripe for plunder was the unsuspecting British Isles.
256
00:15:49,680 --> 00:15:52,960
After the Romans withdrew in the 5th century AD,
257
00:15:52,960 --> 00:15:56,280
England was settled by Germanic cousins of the Vikings -
258
00:15:56,280 --> 00:15:58,160
the Angles and the Saxons.
259
00:15:59,880 --> 00:16:03,840
According to the Anglo-Saxons, their peace was then shattered
260
00:16:03,840 --> 00:16:06,240
by Viking smash-and-grab raiders.
261
00:16:08,560 --> 00:16:12,400
This is the familiar story, but is it true?
262
00:16:12,400 --> 00:16:13,880
If you say a Viking to somebody,
263
00:16:13,880 --> 00:16:16,680
of course, they immediately conjure up an image
264
00:16:16,680 --> 00:16:19,000
of bloodthirsty maniacs storming ashore
265
00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:21,720
in a brutal raid in search of booty -
266
00:16:21,720 --> 00:16:25,280
but, actually, there's precious little archaeological evidence
267
00:16:25,280 --> 00:16:28,000
to support that view of how they acted.
268
00:16:28,000 --> 00:16:31,520
But there is one place, right up here in the north of Scotland,
269
00:16:31,520 --> 00:16:34,720
that takes us back to Viking shock and awe.
270
00:16:41,480 --> 00:16:45,600
In the 8th century, Portmahomack was a stronghold for the Picts,
271
00:16:45,600 --> 00:16:47,560
the Celtic peoples of Scotland.
272
00:16:50,360 --> 00:16:52,760
When Professor Martin Carver dug here,
273
00:16:52,760 --> 00:16:57,200
he discovered the first Pictish monastery underneath this church.
274
00:16:59,800 --> 00:17:02,480
We've got some reconstructions here, on here.
275
00:17:02,480 --> 00:17:03,680
So, if you move that around,
276
00:17:03,680 --> 00:17:05,680
- you've got your monastery...
- OK, that's good.
277
00:17:05,680 --> 00:17:07,440
Right, so, you've - church on the hill...
278
00:17:07,440 --> 00:17:08,840
The buildings on either side...
279
00:17:08,840 --> 00:17:11,800
- It's quite a substantial settlement, this.
- It's very substantial.
280
00:17:11,800 --> 00:17:14,240
They're very busy, very wealthy.
281
00:17:14,240 --> 00:17:16,720
It's almost like a town, it's thriving.
282
00:17:16,720 --> 00:17:19,560
It's in contact with monasteries in Ireland, with Northumbria,
283
00:17:19,560 --> 00:17:22,400
across the Channel and so on, a really important place.
284
00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:25,640
However, the Vikings...are coming.
285
00:17:29,720 --> 00:17:32,440
And they were coming for the treasure.
286
00:17:32,440 --> 00:17:37,640
Church silver inlaid with precious stones made by the monks.
287
00:17:39,080 --> 00:17:44,120
For the Vikings, this was a jewellery shop ripe for a ram raid.
288
00:17:44,120 --> 00:17:46,160
They were making chalices.
289
00:17:46,160 --> 00:17:48,600
This is a precious replica -
290
00:17:48,600 --> 00:17:50,360
but what we did find was little studs,
291
00:17:50,360 --> 00:17:53,160
- you see the little studs there?
- These kinds of things here?
292
00:17:53,160 --> 00:17:54,400
Yeah, we found some of those.
293
00:17:54,400 --> 00:17:56,040
This was the kind of thing being made?
294
00:17:56,040 --> 00:17:58,680
- The kind of thing they were making.
- Wow!
295
00:17:58,680 --> 00:18:01,800
I think it's difficult to exaggerate the amount of wealth involved
296
00:18:01,800 --> 00:18:06,040
and the amount of enthusiasm that was involved.
297
00:18:06,040 --> 00:18:07,400
Then this...
298
00:18:09,520 --> 00:18:10,800
..a monk's skull.
299
00:18:12,280 --> 00:18:13,720
It was violent.
300
00:18:13,720 --> 00:18:17,600
- You see the cut mark of the sword there?
- Whoa!
301
00:18:17,600 --> 00:18:18,800
- On there?
- That's...
302
00:18:18,800 --> 00:18:21,920
- That is a sword cutting somebody's head?
- That is a sword cut mark.
303
00:18:21,920 --> 00:18:25,640
The cuts are being made on the top of the head and behind the head.
304
00:18:26,680 --> 00:18:30,000
He must have been, not only attacked from behind, but kneeling.
305
00:18:30,000 --> 00:18:32,760
Bang, bang, bang. Three cuts.
306
00:18:32,760 --> 00:18:35,240
For the first time, it looks like you've been able to prove
307
00:18:35,240 --> 00:18:38,680
that the Vikings came here, slaughtered the monks
308
00:18:38,680 --> 00:18:42,440
and wiped out a flourishing, wealthy monastic site.
309
00:18:45,480 --> 00:18:47,200
SOUNDS OF BATTLE
310
00:18:48,400 --> 00:18:49,440
WOMAN SCREAMS
311
00:18:53,520 --> 00:18:58,640
The sea had brought this settlement wealth and importance...
312
00:19:00,680 --> 00:19:02,800
..but not that day.
313
00:19:02,800 --> 00:19:06,720
That day it brought fire and death.
314
00:19:07,840 --> 00:19:09,920
That day it brought the Vikings.
315
00:19:12,000 --> 00:19:16,360
Soon, the raiders would return as conquerors.
316
00:19:16,360 --> 00:19:19,960
This time they would come to stay - another staging post
317
00:19:19,960 --> 00:19:22,560
on their journey west across the Atlantic.
318
00:19:25,960 --> 00:19:30,560
On the other side of that ocean, Sarah is making plans.
319
00:19:30,560 --> 00:19:34,720
Before she can dig the potential new site in south-west Newfoundland,
320
00:19:34,720 --> 00:19:39,240
she still needs to convince the authorities to grant permission.
321
00:19:39,240 --> 00:19:42,160
Step one is non-invasive surveys.
322
00:19:42,160 --> 00:19:47,000
We have to go out on the ground and use a magnetometer to measure
323
00:19:47,000 --> 00:19:50,160
what might be buried beneath the ground.
324
00:19:50,160 --> 00:19:52,640
What we do is called ground truthing.
325
00:19:52,640 --> 00:19:55,280
It literally means, we are confirming whether or not
326
00:19:55,280 --> 00:19:58,120
what we've seen from space is actually on the ground
327
00:19:58,120 --> 00:19:59,920
and it's an essential thing you have to do
328
00:19:59,920 --> 00:20:01,640
before you start excavation.
329
00:20:05,040 --> 00:20:07,280
As Sarah awaits the results,
330
00:20:07,280 --> 00:20:11,320
she sets out to learn what a typical Viking site in America looked like.
331
00:20:14,560 --> 00:20:18,040
As there's only one, she's on her way to L'Anse aux Meadows,
332
00:20:18,040 --> 00:20:21,160
the Viking camp discovered on the northern tip of Newfoundland
333
00:20:21,160 --> 00:20:23,000
in the 1960s.
334
00:20:23,000 --> 00:20:24,560
THEY CHEER
335
00:20:29,360 --> 00:20:32,280
I can't even imagine being a Viking in a boat
336
00:20:32,280 --> 00:20:37,160
and sailing by icebergs the size of a mountain.
337
00:20:37,160 --> 00:20:40,280
It gives you a sense of just how intrepid and brave they were,
338
00:20:40,280 --> 00:20:42,000
of seeking new worlds.
339
00:20:47,600 --> 00:20:50,920
One of the pioneering excavators of the historic site,
340
00:20:50,920 --> 00:20:53,960
Birgitta Wallace, is there to meet Sarah.
341
00:20:56,440 --> 00:20:58,880
There are eight buildings on the site
342
00:20:58,880 --> 00:21:01,880
and they are divided into four complexes.
343
00:21:03,520 --> 00:21:05,280
Up to 90 people lived here.
344
00:21:05,280 --> 00:21:08,000
Each building had a different function.
345
00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:10,400
This is one.
346
00:21:10,400 --> 00:21:14,680
It consists of a smelting furnace for iron.
347
00:21:16,360 --> 00:21:20,120
Metalworking was crucial evidence that this was a Viking camp.
348
00:21:20,120 --> 00:21:23,760
No-one else living in this region at the time produced metal.
349
00:21:25,720 --> 00:21:30,000
The reconstructed buildings made of cut turf are critical clues
350
00:21:30,000 --> 00:21:33,960
for when Sarah gets to dig her site further to the south-west.
351
00:21:36,200 --> 00:21:37,920
This is fantastic.
352
00:21:39,680 --> 00:21:45,440
This is the first time I've seen turf houses in person.
353
00:21:45,440 --> 00:21:50,000
So, I'm just looking at the layout of the turf
354
00:21:50,000 --> 00:21:52,520
on each of the houses and sheds.
355
00:21:54,400 --> 00:21:56,720
These thick walls
356
00:21:56,720 --> 00:21:59,880
would have been absolutely perfect natural insulation -
357
00:21:59,880 --> 00:22:01,800
and the nice thing about turf
358
00:22:01,800 --> 00:22:04,520
is you can get any piece of turf to fit together.
359
00:22:04,520 --> 00:22:06,240
It's like all-natural Lego.
360
00:22:07,360 --> 00:22:10,800
And there's one other major clue from L'Anse aux Meadows.
361
00:22:10,800 --> 00:22:15,240
It reinforces the account of Leif's voyage in the saga of Erik the Red.
362
00:22:17,640 --> 00:22:24,000
The most exciting was the finding of three butternuts.
363
00:22:26,160 --> 00:22:28,280
Butternuts - a kind of walnut -
364
00:22:28,280 --> 00:22:31,840
only grow as far north as New Brunswick on the mainland,
365
00:22:31,840 --> 00:22:33,480
hundreds of miles away.
366
00:22:35,040 --> 00:22:38,080
It suggests the Vikings were exploring much further
367
00:22:38,080 --> 00:22:39,960
into North America.
368
00:22:41,560 --> 00:22:46,400
They grow in exactly the same areas as wild grapes in New Brunswick.
369
00:22:46,400 --> 00:22:50,680
And to us that proves that, yes,
370
00:22:50,680 --> 00:22:54,760
they had really observed wild grapes
371
00:22:54,760 --> 00:22:58,760
and named their country after them - Vinland.
372
00:23:01,000 --> 00:23:05,640
L'Anse aux Meadows has given Sarah vital clues about what to look for -
373
00:23:05,640 --> 00:23:08,800
turf buildings and metalworking at her site
374
00:23:08,800 --> 00:23:10,880
400 miles to the south-west.
375
00:23:12,040 --> 00:23:16,360
Could it really be one of the lost settlements of the mythical Vinland?
376
00:23:18,040 --> 00:23:20,720
Well, we'll have to see what we find when we dig!
377
00:23:29,760 --> 00:23:33,360
In Britain, I'm exploring the Viking transformation
378
00:23:33,360 --> 00:23:36,880
from small-scale raiders to full-scale conquerors,
379
00:23:36,880 --> 00:23:39,000
in their quest for new lands.
380
00:23:40,480 --> 00:23:45,560
In 865, the Christian peace of Anglo-Saxon England was shattered
381
00:23:45,560 --> 00:23:49,640
by a pagan Viking invasion, whose leaders included warriors
382
00:23:49,640 --> 00:23:53,040
with names as vivid as Ivar the Boneless.
383
00:23:54,160 --> 00:23:59,400
For the next 13 years, what became known as the Great Heathen Army
384
00:23:59,400 --> 00:24:04,360
rampaged across the country causing chaos and destruction.
385
00:24:06,760 --> 00:24:09,920
Each winter, they would huddle together, building big camps
386
00:24:09,920 --> 00:24:13,080
containing thousands of warriors, where they'd lick their wounds
387
00:24:13,080 --> 00:24:15,640
and prepare for the next season's campaign.
388
00:24:18,560 --> 00:24:21,960
According to the Anglo-Saxons, one of the most important camps
389
00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:25,040
was on the River Trent in the winter of 873...
390
00:24:27,040 --> 00:24:29,560
..at Repton in Derbyshire.
391
00:24:31,280 --> 00:24:35,240
It was the religious epicentre of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Mercia.
392
00:24:39,240 --> 00:24:42,240
- It's a tight stair, Dan...
- Tight squeeze!
393
00:24:42,240 --> 00:24:45,240
..and it's probably pretty ropey.
394
00:24:45,240 --> 00:24:47,440
Archaeologist Professor Martin Biddle
395
00:24:47,440 --> 00:24:51,240
started out looking for Anglo-Saxon remains.
396
00:24:51,240 --> 00:24:55,280
It is about 30 years since I've been up here.
397
00:24:55,280 --> 00:24:59,280
He had little idea he'd soon uncover one of the most important sites
398
00:24:59,280 --> 00:25:02,240
in the history of the Vikings in Britain.
399
00:25:02,240 --> 00:25:04,840
Right, now these are quite a long pull,
400
00:25:04,840 --> 00:25:07,840
and I hope I don't go flat on my face. No. We've done it.
401
00:25:07,840 --> 00:25:10,600
Out into safety in the bright sun.
402
00:25:10,600 --> 00:25:11,720
Gosh!
403
00:25:15,040 --> 00:25:18,120
- What a great view!
- The great valley of the Trent.
404
00:25:18,120 --> 00:25:21,200
- And we are as far from the sea as you can get in the UK?
- Just about.
405
00:25:21,200 --> 00:25:22,800
Just about. Yeah.
406
00:25:24,240 --> 00:25:27,840
The Viking camp was lost until Martin started to dig
407
00:25:27,840 --> 00:25:29,880
in the grounds of Repton School.
408
00:25:31,040 --> 00:25:34,200
Just over there, beyond the headmaster's house,
409
00:25:34,200 --> 00:25:36,040
as it is today, of the school,
410
00:25:36,040 --> 00:25:37,360
the ditch started there
411
00:25:37,360 --> 00:25:40,200
and it curved right back under the school building
412
00:25:40,200 --> 00:25:44,440
and came back and stopped against the east end of the church.
413
00:25:44,440 --> 00:25:48,160
Martin's excavations suggested a defensive ditch
414
00:25:48,160 --> 00:25:50,040
closed off by the river.
415
00:25:50,040 --> 00:25:52,960
- So, that's just...
- Oh, my gosh.
- Let's see what we can see.
416
00:25:52,960 --> 00:25:54,880
Something modern on the top of the tower.
417
00:25:54,880 --> 00:25:56,560
So that is a serious camp.
418
00:25:56,560 --> 00:25:59,640
The ditch is about four metres deep, about five metres wide at the top.
419
00:25:59,640 --> 00:26:03,040
And so these are not Vikings raiding the coast,
420
00:26:03,040 --> 00:26:07,680
these are Vikings with huge armies marching right in. Nowhere is safe.
421
00:26:07,680 --> 00:26:09,200
Nowhere is safe.
422
00:26:12,600 --> 00:26:14,880
The threat wasn't just a military one.
423
00:26:14,880 --> 00:26:17,960
The camps were becoming hubs of trade and industry,
424
00:26:17,960 --> 00:26:19,920
just like mobile towns...
425
00:26:23,720 --> 00:26:26,840
..but the invaders didn't have it all their own way.
426
00:26:26,840 --> 00:26:29,680
Do we know anything about what the English were able to do in return?
427
00:26:29,680 --> 00:26:31,360
Yeah, we do. Quite a lot, actually -
428
00:26:31,360 --> 00:26:34,040
because of a marvellous grave we found just down there.
429
00:26:34,040 --> 00:26:36,640
We couldn't understand it, cos it seemed to have three legs.
430
00:26:36,640 --> 00:26:37,840
It didn't have three legs.
431
00:26:37,840 --> 00:26:41,400
It had two legs, plus an iron sword down his left side in its scabbard,
432
00:26:41,400 --> 00:26:44,480
and we found that there was a huge cut
433
00:26:44,480 --> 00:26:48,240
in the underside of the left part of the top of the femur -
434
00:26:48,240 --> 00:26:50,600
and you can imagine somebody going down like that,
435
00:26:50,600 --> 00:26:54,080
and it must have castrated him because between his legs
436
00:26:54,080 --> 00:26:59,200
we found a wild boar's tusk, which is laid out quite obviously as...
437
00:26:59,200 --> 00:27:01,400
- A replacement!
- ..a replacement!
438
00:27:01,400 --> 00:27:04,960
And round his neck, he had a necklace with some glass beads
439
00:27:04,960 --> 00:27:08,720
- and a silver hammer of the god Thor.
- That's a Viking.
440
00:27:10,200 --> 00:27:15,400
The Vikings left their pagan mark all over this holy Christian centre.
441
00:27:15,400 --> 00:27:20,240
In the vicarage garden, Martin discovered a mass heathen burial.
442
00:27:22,960 --> 00:27:25,800
We took photographs at every single stage of this operation.
443
00:27:25,800 --> 00:27:28,720
- Yes, look at that.
- What? Are those bones?!
444
00:27:28,720 --> 00:27:32,360
- Those are the bones in the eastern compartment.
- No! Wow.
445
00:27:34,120 --> 00:27:36,280
A layer of bones about that thick
446
00:27:36,280 --> 00:27:38,000
and they are the big bones,
447
00:27:38,000 --> 00:27:40,200
and they've been brought from somewhere -
448
00:27:40,200 --> 00:27:42,000
that's why the small bones aren't there -
449
00:27:42,000 --> 00:27:43,880
and they were stacked beautifully.
450
00:27:43,880 --> 00:27:45,160
What we call charnel-wise,
451
00:27:45,160 --> 00:27:47,280
like a medieval charnel house - a bone house.
452
00:27:47,280 --> 00:27:48,480
A bit like that.
453
00:27:50,440 --> 00:27:55,000
The most likely explanation is that these are the bodies of Viking dead
454
00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:58,440
carried back to be honoured in secure Viking territory.
455
00:28:00,480 --> 00:28:04,880
Over 260 people, 80% male.
456
00:28:04,880 --> 00:28:08,360
They're mainly young adults, no children.
457
00:28:08,360 --> 00:28:10,880
It's a very highly-selected population.
458
00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:13,560
They have been reburied here around somebody.
459
00:28:15,560 --> 00:28:18,400
Martin has built up a picture of what happened here
460
00:28:18,400 --> 00:28:22,640
from a 17th century account by a gardener who'd disturbed the burial.
461
00:28:24,240 --> 00:28:29,480
- He found "the skeleton of a humane man nine feet long."
- Wow.
462
00:28:29,480 --> 00:28:33,400
And around that "there were the bodies of an hundred others
463
00:28:33,400 --> 00:28:36,560
"with their feet pointing towards the central grave."
464
00:28:38,320 --> 00:28:42,320
Martin thinks the giant was a war leader.
465
00:28:42,320 --> 00:28:45,760
We think it's the burial of Ivar Beinlausi.
466
00:28:45,760 --> 00:28:47,320
So, this is Ivar the Boneless,
467
00:28:47,320 --> 00:28:49,880
who is one of the most famous Viking commanders.
468
00:28:49,880 --> 00:28:54,240
And one of the leaders of the Great Army that arrived in Essex in 865
469
00:28:54,240 --> 00:28:58,120
and which was here in the winter of 873-4
470
00:28:58,120 --> 00:29:00,840
after ten years of campaigning, for the last time.
471
00:29:03,240 --> 00:29:06,640
Burying their leaders in the heart of the English countryside
472
00:29:06,640 --> 00:29:10,400
suggests these Vikings were putting down roots -
473
00:29:10,400 --> 00:29:13,200
just like Viking pioneers had already done
474
00:29:13,200 --> 00:29:15,280
on the Atlantic fringes of Scotland.
475
00:29:21,440 --> 00:29:25,080
And that's where Sarah and her team are testing out her methods
476
00:29:25,080 --> 00:29:28,160
on the ground, before she's allowed to dig in America.
477
00:29:30,320 --> 00:29:32,600
She is focusing on a potential site
478
00:29:32,600 --> 00:29:36,720
on the tiny Orkney island of Auskerry.
479
00:29:41,480 --> 00:29:44,960
Can she prove the technology will work in the new conditions
480
00:29:44,960 --> 00:29:47,080
of the North Atlantic?
481
00:29:47,080 --> 00:29:52,040
So, Dan, we've just had some news back about Scotland
482
00:29:52,040 --> 00:29:55,000
from our team on the ground.
483
00:29:55,000 --> 00:29:59,280
Now, the experts were convinced
484
00:29:59,280 --> 00:30:02,000
that this was a potential long house.
485
00:30:04,720 --> 00:30:09,520
- Unfortunately, it turns out this is modern peat cutting.
- What?
486
00:30:10,920 --> 00:30:13,800
I mean, Sarah, it's not your best work, I've got to say. But...
487
00:30:13,800 --> 00:30:15,920
Yeah - you know, all is not lost.
488
00:30:17,320 --> 00:30:20,600
But Sarah may have better luck in nearby Shetland,
489
00:30:20,600 --> 00:30:24,920
in a place already known for artefacts from the late Viking era.
490
00:30:24,920 --> 00:30:28,280
And something very cool has just come up.
491
00:30:28,280 --> 00:30:31,720
This is a place called North House in Shetland.
492
00:30:34,160 --> 00:30:39,320
Here we have a modern farmstead, but take a look at that!
493
00:30:39,320 --> 00:30:42,080
That is very interesting there. Is this the modern settlement?
494
00:30:42,080 --> 00:30:44,480
So, it's right on the edge of the modern settlement...
495
00:30:44,480 --> 00:30:46,840
But you cannot see this at all, visually.
496
00:30:46,840 --> 00:30:49,240
That is very interesting... Is this the coast here?
497
00:30:49,240 --> 00:30:51,840
- Yeah, this is the coastline.
- So, again, right on the coast.
498
00:30:51,840 --> 00:30:54,760
And, you know, I'm really excited by this potential find,
499
00:30:54,760 --> 00:30:56,400
especially since they're finding
500
00:30:56,400 --> 00:30:58,400
Viking material culture there already.
501
00:31:06,240 --> 00:31:08,200
Now, we are going to go excavate
502
00:31:08,200 --> 00:31:10,680
to find out what's there, or what isn't.
503
00:31:12,560 --> 00:31:16,320
Sarah is joining her team, who've already been digging for a week.
504
00:31:18,600 --> 00:31:21,520
I'm hopeful that we could potentially find something Norse.
505
00:31:21,520 --> 00:31:23,400
I guess we'll just have to wait and see.
506
00:31:23,400 --> 00:31:25,960
I can't wait to get my hands dirty.
507
00:31:25,960 --> 00:31:28,880
- Welcome to North House.
- Thank you! How's it all going?
508
00:31:28,880 --> 00:31:31,080
It's going quite well. I think we've...
509
00:31:31,080 --> 00:31:33,840
Archaeologist Rick Barton has started the dig.
510
00:31:35,680 --> 00:31:39,080
After mistaking a peat cutting for a Viking site,
511
00:31:39,080 --> 00:31:41,280
there is a lot riding on this for Sarah.
512
00:31:43,440 --> 00:31:45,320
It looks like a wall.
513
00:31:45,320 --> 00:31:47,800
- We've got walls.
- Excellent.
514
00:31:52,200 --> 00:31:53,880
That is a big wall.
515
00:31:56,120 --> 00:32:01,120
- Yeah, yeah. OK, are you ready?
- OK, yeah. Ready, one, two, three...
516
00:32:01,120 --> 00:32:03,000
As the excavation progresses,
517
00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:05,560
it's clear that the wall they're following
518
00:32:05,560 --> 00:32:07,520
matches the satellite imagery.
519
00:32:07,520 --> 00:32:11,760
That's that curvy bit, so the edge is right here.
520
00:32:11,760 --> 00:32:14,400
The technology once used to find pyramids
521
00:32:14,400 --> 00:32:18,120
has proved itself on Sarah's greatest challenge.
522
00:32:18,120 --> 00:32:21,480
It has found something as small as buried walls.
523
00:32:22,520 --> 00:32:24,520
But is this a Viking site?
524
00:32:27,840 --> 00:32:30,400
I've heard rumours. Oh!
525
00:32:30,400 --> 00:32:33,200
- It's a bead. Faceted.
- Oh!
526
00:32:33,200 --> 00:32:34,720
And if you hold it up to the light,
527
00:32:34,720 --> 00:32:37,720
- you can see where the thread hole goes through it.
- Oh, yeah, yeah.
528
00:32:37,720 --> 00:32:39,680
That's amazing.
529
00:32:39,680 --> 00:32:41,560
It's not just any old bead -
530
00:32:41,560 --> 00:32:45,440
it's made of the semiprecious stone carnelian, possibly from India.
531
00:32:45,440 --> 00:32:46,800
Wow!
532
00:32:46,800 --> 00:32:51,280
These people weren't just expanding west. They were trading east, too.
533
00:32:53,240 --> 00:32:55,160
Look at that - beautiful!
534
00:32:55,160 --> 00:32:57,440
- Well done, Tom!
- Thank you, cheers.
- Well done.
535
00:32:57,440 --> 00:32:59,640
- I think there's a pint in store.
- Yes.
536
00:33:00,920 --> 00:33:03,480
I was uncertain when we went to Scotland what we'd find,
537
00:33:03,480 --> 00:33:07,400
but now that we've actually found this incredible stone structure,
538
00:33:07,400 --> 00:33:09,320
that gives me a lot more optimism
539
00:33:09,320 --> 00:33:12,400
about what we may find in Iceland and in Newfoundland.
540
00:33:14,160 --> 00:33:16,680
While Sarah sets up her final test,
541
00:33:16,680 --> 00:33:19,200
waiting for permission to dig in Newfoundland,
542
00:33:19,200 --> 00:33:22,880
I'm exploring what the Vikings did next in mainland Britain.
543
00:33:27,960 --> 00:33:32,080
In 876, they made their capital in Jorvik,
544
00:33:32,080 --> 00:33:34,880
the Viking name for York.
545
00:33:34,880 --> 00:33:39,000
It became the centre of a Viking state in England,
546
00:33:39,000 --> 00:33:41,680
later known as the Danelaw.
547
00:33:45,480 --> 00:33:50,120
In York, the raiders and settlers became successful urban traders
548
00:33:50,120 --> 00:33:54,720
and manufacturers in the first industrial revolution.
549
00:33:54,720 --> 00:33:57,080
The extent of their trading is revealed
550
00:33:57,080 --> 00:33:59,080
in their most prized possessions.
551
00:34:01,080 --> 00:34:02,680
Look at this!
552
00:34:02,680 --> 00:34:04,600
- It's fantastic, isn't it?
- Wow!
553
00:34:04,600 --> 00:34:06,600
That looks like it's brand-new!
554
00:34:08,320 --> 00:34:12,400
Dr Andy Woods is curator of a unique Viking treasure trove -
555
00:34:12,400 --> 00:34:13,800
the Vale of York Hoard.
556
00:34:14,960 --> 00:34:17,840
It's just mesmerising, isn't it?
557
00:34:17,840 --> 00:34:21,000
Some of the hoard is typical raiders' booty,
558
00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:24,680
but it also reveals what else made the Vikings tick.
559
00:34:24,680 --> 00:34:27,760
If they couldn't steal it, they'd trade it.
560
00:34:29,720 --> 00:34:32,240
We have coins that come all the way from Uzbekistan.
561
00:34:32,240 --> 00:34:34,840
- Uzbekistan?
- They're struck in Samarkand in Uzbekistan.
562
00:34:34,840 --> 00:34:39,120
What?! Arabic writing found in a hoard...
563
00:34:39,120 --> 00:34:41,240
- In northern England.
- ..in northern England.
564
00:34:41,240 --> 00:34:44,360
And if you look in Scandinavia we find vast quantities of these,
565
00:34:44,360 --> 00:34:48,080
what are known as dirhams - and, so, that's just amongst the coinage.
566
00:34:48,080 --> 00:34:51,080
More widely, here, we have this piece of ring,
567
00:34:51,080 --> 00:34:52,720
probably made in Russia,
568
00:34:52,720 --> 00:34:57,160
and this fragment of brooch here, which is likely of Irish design.
569
00:34:57,160 --> 00:34:59,040
So, what we can see is, you get this network
570
00:34:59,040 --> 00:35:00,560
stretching right across Europe.
571
00:35:00,560 --> 00:35:02,080
Uzbekistan,
572
00:35:02,080 --> 00:35:03,480
Ireland,
573
00:35:03,480 --> 00:35:06,280
- Russia.
- Yes, all on one tray.
574
00:35:06,280 --> 00:35:07,960
It's quite fantastic, isn't it?
575
00:35:07,960 --> 00:35:09,520
We talk about globalisation today,
576
00:35:09,520 --> 00:35:11,200
but clearly it was going on back then.
577
00:35:11,200 --> 00:35:14,440
People and things were travelling over huge distances.
578
00:35:16,720 --> 00:35:20,120
And this isn't Viking York's only buried treasure.
579
00:35:24,000 --> 00:35:29,280
What excites Dr Andrew Jones isn't silver or gold,
580
00:35:29,280 --> 00:35:32,920
it's a rather more base material found beneath its streets.
581
00:35:37,000 --> 00:35:39,600
I would say that where we are sitting now,
582
00:35:39,600 --> 00:35:42,640
there is probably ten metres of archaeological deposits
583
00:35:42,640 --> 00:35:44,080
below our feet,
584
00:35:44,080 --> 00:35:48,960
and probably at least three metres of that is human excrement.
585
00:35:48,960 --> 00:35:50,920
- Really?
- I believe so.
586
00:35:50,920 --> 00:35:52,640
Wow. And what can excrement tell us?
587
00:35:52,640 --> 00:35:56,160
It tells you about diet, what people were eating.
588
00:35:56,160 --> 00:35:59,680
Andrew is a scatologist. He studies poo.
589
00:35:59,680 --> 00:36:01,520
And he's brought along a model
590
00:36:01,520 --> 00:36:04,120
of his favourite specimen to the tea shop.
591
00:36:04,120 --> 00:36:07,760
- The best thing is to show you this object here...
- Oh, my God!
592
00:36:07,760 --> 00:36:11,960
This is the best-preserved piece of ancient mineralised excrement.
593
00:36:11,960 --> 00:36:15,920
It's the largest individual stool we have ever found in Europe.
594
00:36:15,920 --> 00:36:20,440
Some people call it the crown jewels of British excrement.
595
00:36:22,680 --> 00:36:27,120
The poo reveals the rich and diverse diet enjoyed by York's citizens.
596
00:36:29,480 --> 00:36:31,800
It's mainly cereal bran,
597
00:36:31,800 --> 00:36:35,920
but we've even found some samples which have whole grains in them
598
00:36:35,920 --> 00:36:38,160
- that have been cooked, a bit like a rice pudding.
- OK.
599
00:36:38,160 --> 00:36:40,920
So, we're moving into understanding about cooking methods,
600
00:36:40,920 --> 00:36:43,440
not just ingredients, so that's fantastic.
601
00:36:43,440 --> 00:36:46,880
The Vikings of York were living off the fat of the land.
602
00:36:46,880 --> 00:36:50,240
Loads of fish, very large numbers of birds.
603
00:36:50,240 --> 00:36:54,280
Now, the big things on diet, of course... Moo!
604
00:36:54,280 --> 00:36:55,480
HE LAUGHS
605
00:36:55,480 --> 00:36:58,280
- These are...
- Cow.
- ..cattle bones. There's a lot of beef.
606
00:36:58,280 --> 00:37:02,960
And so most of the farmers in the area were providing animals
607
00:37:02,960 --> 00:37:05,400
that were brought into the market for slaughter here.
608
00:37:05,400 --> 00:37:08,440
So, that suggests there was a lot of food around.
609
00:37:08,440 --> 00:37:12,400
The poo also lifts the lid on the perils of living in thriving,
610
00:37:12,400 --> 00:37:14,600
overcrowded towns.
611
00:37:14,600 --> 00:37:17,960
But it also had many thousands of parasite eggs.
612
00:37:17,960 --> 00:37:20,760
The ascaris worms, they bore through the gut wall
613
00:37:20,760 --> 00:37:24,320
and sometimes have been known to emerge
614
00:37:24,320 --> 00:37:27,120
from every orifice of the human body,
615
00:37:27,120 --> 00:37:29,640
including the corner of your eye.
616
00:37:29,640 --> 00:37:31,600
They're a fact of Viking life.
617
00:37:31,600 --> 00:37:35,440
Why, if you were a Viking, why would you want to come to York,
618
00:37:35,440 --> 00:37:38,440
if it's going to make you a bit sick and it's covered in poo?
619
00:37:38,440 --> 00:37:41,960
Well, York was a really important place to the Viking world -
620
00:37:41,960 --> 00:37:44,760
it was the capital of Viking England.
621
00:37:44,760 --> 00:37:47,360
It was where all the bright craftspeople,
622
00:37:47,360 --> 00:37:49,280
all the bright money-making people,
623
00:37:49,280 --> 00:37:51,800
all the adventurers would come to cluster
624
00:37:51,800 --> 00:37:53,960
and where the powerful people were.
625
00:37:57,600 --> 00:37:59,440
What the things that have been found
626
00:37:59,440 --> 00:38:01,280
beneath our feet here in York tell us
627
00:38:01,280 --> 00:38:04,200
is that the Vikings thrived, they got rich, they traded,
628
00:38:04,200 --> 00:38:08,920
they made stuff and they pioneered a new way of urban living here
629
00:38:08,920 --> 00:38:12,920
that sent ripples out across the rest of the British Isles.
630
00:38:16,280 --> 00:38:20,000
Viking York became one of the most important urban centres
631
00:38:20,000 --> 00:38:21,520
in Western Europe.
632
00:38:25,640 --> 00:38:29,000
It was part of a trading and raiding empire
633
00:38:29,000 --> 00:38:32,560
that stretched as far east as the Caspian Sea
634
00:38:32,560 --> 00:38:35,920
and as far south as Africa,
635
00:38:35,920 --> 00:38:39,360
and at the height of their powers, the Vikings pushed further west
636
00:38:39,360 --> 00:38:43,240
across the North Atlantic in their search for new worlds.
637
00:38:44,720 --> 00:38:49,040
Their next major port of call was Iceland,
638
00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:52,560
and it provides the final test for Sarah's technology.
639
00:38:55,000 --> 00:38:58,680
Any new site in America could be made out of turf,
640
00:38:58,680 --> 00:39:01,440
just like those buildings at L'Anse aux Meadows
641
00:39:01,440 --> 00:39:03,800
and most Viking dwellings in Iceland.
642
00:39:06,600 --> 00:39:10,000
Spotting turf, buried beneath turf,
643
00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:12,840
from space will be tough.
644
00:39:13,960 --> 00:39:16,160
One man who may be able to help Sarah
645
00:39:16,160 --> 00:39:19,680
is Viking expert Dr Doug Bolender.
646
00:39:19,680 --> 00:39:23,360
He will be the first Viking specialist that has seen the work
647
00:39:23,360 --> 00:39:26,640
that we've done in Iceland. So, I'm quite apprehensive.
648
00:39:27,760 --> 00:39:31,040
Doug has spent 15 years searching for Viking sites
649
00:39:31,040 --> 00:39:33,120
in the North Atlantic...
650
00:39:33,120 --> 00:39:37,440
but he's sceptical about what Sarah might be seeing in North America.
651
00:39:39,200 --> 00:39:44,520
I mean, it could be a small raised section of rock or sand.
652
00:39:44,520 --> 00:39:49,160
As human beings, we are basically made
653
00:39:49,160 --> 00:39:51,320
to recognise patterns
654
00:39:51,320 --> 00:39:54,560
and not only are we really good at recognising patterns,
655
00:39:54,560 --> 00:39:56,720
we're really good at making them up.
656
00:39:56,720 --> 00:39:58,840
You can certainly look and say, you know,
657
00:39:58,840 --> 00:40:03,280
that looks like a rectangle, it looks like a structure.
658
00:40:03,280 --> 00:40:07,480
But many of the things that look like buildings in this image
659
00:40:07,480 --> 00:40:09,920
do seem to match the geology -
660
00:40:09,920 --> 00:40:12,360
and, about those, I'm extremely suspicious.
661
00:40:13,440 --> 00:40:15,720
For Sarah, this is her biggest test.
662
00:40:15,720 --> 00:40:18,800
If she can spot buried turf walls in Iceland,
663
00:40:18,800 --> 00:40:21,480
she may have a chance in America.
664
00:40:21,480 --> 00:40:24,280
We focused in on one area in particular.
665
00:40:24,280 --> 00:40:27,240
So, yeah, we've got a series of fields.
666
00:40:27,240 --> 00:40:29,640
You've got a couple of different shades of green,
667
00:40:29,640 --> 00:40:32,040
but it looks completely homogenous.
668
00:40:32,040 --> 00:40:35,920
Then when we started processing the data using the near infrared,
669
00:40:35,920 --> 00:40:40,160
all of a sudden some really interesting shapes started popping.
670
00:40:40,160 --> 00:40:42,720
Well, the first thing that pops out of this
671
00:40:42,720 --> 00:40:45,800
is that it looks like there is something here.
672
00:40:45,800 --> 00:40:48,440
The size looks about right.
673
00:40:48,440 --> 00:40:51,560
It is at least suggestive of something like a farmstead.
674
00:40:51,560 --> 00:40:53,440
Which is exciting.
675
00:40:58,280 --> 00:41:03,640
If there was one potential site that I wanted to pop up,
676
00:41:03,640 --> 00:41:09,360
this would be the place that I would want to see something to go after.
677
00:41:09,360 --> 00:41:11,640
I'm just excited that it actually is showing -
678
00:41:11,640 --> 00:41:13,240
something is showing up there.
679
00:41:14,360 --> 00:41:18,040
It's the first time an expert has seen the work that I've done
680
00:41:18,040 --> 00:41:22,160
in Iceland and confirmed it, so I couldn't have been more thrilled.
681
00:41:23,800 --> 00:41:26,520
Sarah will now head to Iceland to check out
682
00:41:26,520 --> 00:41:29,520
if the buried turf structures she spotted from space
683
00:41:29,520 --> 00:41:31,560
are actually there.
684
00:41:38,360 --> 00:41:41,440
It would have taken the Vikings more than a week in good weather
685
00:41:41,440 --> 00:41:45,320
to sail to Iceland, so I want to explore how they made it.
686
00:41:51,600 --> 00:41:54,520
Very tiring. Got to sleep when you can when you're at sea.
687
00:41:56,240 --> 00:41:58,560
Keep you going through the night.
688
00:42:01,560 --> 00:42:05,920
Voyaging across the North Atlantic is fraught with uncertainty.
689
00:42:05,920 --> 00:42:09,040
According to Captain Esben, the Vikings were experts
690
00:42:09,040 --> 00:42:12,520
at guessing where land was, using subtle clues.
691
00:42:14,000 --> 00:42:17,440
That could be everything from the smell of the grass,
692
00:42:17,440 --> 00:42:20,560
or the pine trees you can smell before you see the land.
693
00:42:20,560 --> 00:42:23,200
It could be forming clouds over land, it could be sea birds
694
00:42:23,200 --> 00:42:25,520
that are nesting on land, so they fly back every night
695
00:42:25,520 --> 00:42:27,640
when they've been out fishing,
696
00:42:27,640 --> 00:42:30,880
it could be reflecting wave from the shoreline.
697
00:42:30,880 --> 00:42:34,040
So, actually, the Vikings didn't have to hit the nail on the head,
698
00:42:34,040 --> 00:42:37,120
they could get to within 50 or 60 miles of an island
699
00:42:37,120 --> 00:42:39,680
and then they would get clues that would allow them to re-set
700
00:42:39,680 --> 00:42:42,520
- and actually hit the landfall they wanted.
- Yeah, exactly.
701
00:42:45,120 --> 00:42:47,000
But in the middle of the vast ocean
702
00:42:47,000 --> 00:42:49,880
they needed different navigation techniques -
703
00:42:49,880 --> 00:42:52,080
some of them way ahead of their time.
704
00:42:54,600 --> 00:42:57,400
There was an artefact found in Greenland
705
00:42:57,400 --> 00:42:59,520
on a Viking settlement there,
706
00:42:59,520 --> 00:43:01,360
it's a sundial compass.
707
00:43:01,360 --> 00:43:04,080
This is a replica of the compass found on the island
708
00:43:04,080 --> 00:43:05,880
of Uunartoq in Greenland.
709
00:43:05,880 --> 00:43:10,200
When the noonday sun casts a shadow onto the line, it gives a bearing.
710
00:43:11,720 --> 00:43:16,880
So, I just spin the disk until the shadow touches the line
711
00:43:16,880 --> 00:43:19,400
- and now I know where north and south is.
- Really?
- Yeah.
712
00:43:19,400 --> 00:43:22,080
- So, that's north, there?
- Yeah.
- And that's accurate?
- Yes.
713
00:43:22,080 --> 00:43:24,080
We actually used this very instrument to sail
714
00:43:24,080 --> 00:43:26,320
from Denmark to Edinburgh in Scotland
715
00:43:26,320 --> 00:43:28,520
and we were three degrees off when we got there.
716
00:43:28,520 --> 00:43:30,640
- You found Edinburgh?
- Mm.
- That's good going.
717
00:43:30,640 --> 00:43:33,440
Do you know are there any other tools that they would have used?
718
00:43:33,440 --> 00:43:37,400
There's a description in some of the sagas about a sunstone -
719
00:43:37,400 --> 00:43:39,600
a sort of an almost magical sunstone -
720
00:43:39,600 --> 00:43:42,760
that even though it was overcast you could find the directions of the sun
721
00:43:42,760 --> 00:43:45,400
and we've tried out different natural stones
722
00:43:45,400 --> 00:43:49,280
and one of them that we've tried is Icelandic feldspar.
723
00:43:49,280 --> 00:43:52,040
The crystal allows you to see the sun
724
00:43:52,040 --> 00:43:54,280
even when it's hidden behind a cloud.
725
00:43:54,280 --> 00:43:57,200
And if you look straight up through it, you see that the marker
726
00:43:57,200 --> 00:43:58,600
actually makes two shadows.
727
00:43:58,600 --> 00:44:01,320
Then when they have the same grey shadow, then that's...
728
00:44:01,320 --> 00:44:03,000
Then you're pointing right at the sun.
729
00:44:03,000 --> 00:44:05,320
..then you're pointing this side straight to the sun.
730
00:44:11,640 --> 00:44:15,280
Spending time on this replica Viking ship has opened my eyes.
731
00:44:15,280 --> 00:44:17,400
It has taught me a huge amount.
732
00:44:17,400 --> 00:44:19,760
They were masters, not just of sailing,
733
00:44:19,760 --> 00:44:22,000
but of navigation, as well.
734
00:44:22,000 --> 00:44:24,280
I'm not surprised they could find these islands
735
00:44:24,280 --> 00:44:26,360
in the middle of the North Atlantic.
736
00:44:28,120 --> 00:44:32,320
By the end of the 9th century, the Vikings had voyaged as far west
737
00:44:32,320 --> 00:44:34,080
as any European.
738
00:44:37,160 --> 00:44:39,360
Just as they were settling in York,
739
00:44:39,360 --> 00:44:42,720
other Viking pioneers were arriving in a new land.
740
00:44:45,320 --> 00:44:46,760
Iceland.
741
00:44:51,480 --> 00:44:54,360
And it's where Sarah and I are meeting up again
742
00:44:54,360 --> 00:44:56,280
for the next stage of the quest.
743
00:44:59,760 --> 00:45:03,160
SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
744
00:45:06,920 --> 00:45:09,360
According to the Old Norse sagas,
745
00:45:09,360 --> 00:45:12,160
the most famous settler, Erik the Red,
746
00:45:12,160 --> 00:45:16,480
arrived here after he was banished from Norway for murder.
747
00:45:16,480 --> 00:45:19,400
But most of the immigrants came for another reason -
748
00:45:19,400 --> 00:45:21,120
land.
749
00:45:21,120 --> 00:45:24,000
This astonishing story of frontier pioneers
750
00:45:24,000 --> 00:45:26,720
has a surprising British twist.
751
00:45:26,720 --> 00:45:30,040
Recently, geneticist Dr Kari Stefansson
752
00:45:30,040 --> 00:45:33,840
looked into the origins of the Icelandic settlers.
753
00:45:35,360 --> 00:45:38,280
There is a book written about 1,000 years ago
754
00:45:38,280 --> 00:45:40,120
called the Book of Settlement
755
00:45:40,120 --> 00:45:43,320
and it says that Iceland was settled by Norwegian Vikings
756
00:45:43,320 --> 00:45:45,200
who stopped by in the British Isles,
757
00:45:45,200 --> 00:45:47,880
picked up slaves and went up to Iceland.
758
00:45:47,880 --> 00:45:51,520
So, we decided to examine that story.
759
00:45:53,200 --> 00:45:54,840
He traced inherited DNA
760
00:45:54,840 --> 00:45:59,360
to show that three-quarters of men were of Norwegian origin,
761
00:45:59,360 --> 00:46:03,560
but that two-thirds of women were from the British Isles.
762
00:46:05,640 --> 00:46:08,560
So, it looks like Iceland was settled by Norwegian boys
763
00:46:08,560 --> 00:46:10,320
who stopped by in British Isles,
764
00:46:10,320 --> 00:46:14,320
picked up women and went up to Iceland and settled down.
765
00:46:14,320 --> 00:46:16,120
Last time, when I went to England,
766
00:46:16,120 --> 00:46:19,320
it looked to me like they took all the pretty women with them.
767
00:46:19,320 --> 00:46:21,200
THEY LAUGH
768
00:46:21,200 --> 00:46:24,840
- So, most of the men who came here were Norwegian.
- Yes.
769
00:46:24,840 --> 00:46:26,920
What about the other men? Who were they?
770
00:46:26,920 --> 00:46:31,040
They were probably slaves that were caught in Britain.
771
00:46:31,040 --> 00:46:33,120
So, even more British and Irish.
772
00:46:33,120 --> 00:46:34,440
Amazing.
773
00:46:34,440 --> 00:46:36,920
So, there are important ties of kinship
774
00:46:36,920 --> 00:46:40,880
- between modern British and Irish people and Icelanders.
- Yes.
775
00:46:40,880 --> 00:46:42,560
As much as I hate to admit it,
776
00:46:42,560 --> 00:46:45,440
we are probably the same species as the British.
777
00:46:45,440 --> 00:46:48,840
Lucky you! Intrepid, maritime,
778
00:46:48,840 --> 00:46:50,560
tough,
779
00:46:50,560 --> 00:46:52,000
tall.
780
00:46:57,120 --> 00:47:01,160
So, if the sagas are right, are the satellites, too?
781
00:47:02,320 --> 00:47:05,840
It's time to test out whether the tiny turf structures
782
00:47:05,840 --> 00:47:09,640
Sarah thinks she spotted from space are really there.
783
00:47:11,840 --> 00:47:14,160
But you're pretty sure there will be something here?
784
00:47:14,160 --> 00:47:17,240
We've found what look like a number of potential features,
785
00:47:17,240 --> 00:47:18,920
one possible farm.
786
00:47:18,920 --> 00:47:21,760
Is it Norse? Is it something else? Is it ANYTHING?
787
00:47:27,320 --> 00:47:29,280
If this doesn't work...
788
00:47:29,280 --> 00:47:32,080
well, we're not going to find anything in North America, are we?
789
00:47:32,080 --> 00:47:33,840
We're not going to have a leg to stand on.
790
00:47:33,840 --> 00:47:35,560
You have to deliver North America.
791
00:47:35,560 --> 00:47:38,400
Come on, that's why we're here. That would be so exciting.
792
00:47:43,120 --> 00:47:47,040
We're joining Doug Bolender and his colleague Gudny Zoega
793
00:47:47,040 --> 00:47:49,840
at their site in Hegranes, North Iceland.
794
00:47:52,160 --> 00:47:55,600
This is the spot Sarah identified in the satellite imagery.
795
00:47:57,200 --> 00:48:00,920
Does this field really hide a settlement?
796
00:48:02,000 --> 00:48:04,240
- Would you like the honours?
- I would love to.
797
00:48:04,240 --> 00:48:07,120
We are taking core samples to look for turf building blocks
798
00:48:07,120 --> 00:48:08,520
under the surface.
799
00:48:08,520 --> 00:48:10,400
I got it, Dan.
800
00:48:10,400 --> 00:48:13,520
The Once and Future King!
801
00:48:13,520 --> 00:48:14,600
Yay!
802
00:48:14,600 --> 00:48:19,200
The turf blocks often contain telltale layers of volcanic ash.
803
00:48:19,200 --> 00:48:20,600
Ooh!
804
00:48:20,600 --> 00:48:23,560
I'm seeing some white there.
805
00:48:23,560 --> 00:48:25,480
Yeah, you are seeing some white here.
806
00:48:25,480 --> 00:48:27,800
So, we have more tephra in this.
807
00:48:27,800 --> 00:48:30,720
- So, this is volcanic ash here?
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
808
00:48:31,760 --> 00:48:34,720
Each of these thin layers gives an accurate age.
809
00:48:37,720 --> 00:48:42,200
Every Icelandic volcanic eruption can be precisely dated.
810
00:48:44,520 --> 00:48:46,200
So, what we're seeing here
811
00:48:46,200 --> 00:48:49,800
is that we have a little bit of the white tephra from 1104 AD,
812
00:48:49,800 --> 00:48:51,480
and then underneath of it,
813
00:48:51,480 --> 00:48:55,040
we have this darker grey or blackish tephra,
814
00:48:55,040 --> 00:48:58,520
- which in all likelihood is from 1300 AD.
- OK.
815
00:48:58,520 --> 00:49:01,000
But you can see immediately those are in the wrong order.
816
00:49:01,000 --> 00:49:05,160
Here we have 1104 on top of 1300.
817
00:49:05,160 --> 00:49:07,960
So, this is one of those certain signs that what we are seeing
818
00:49:07,960 --> 00:49:11,040
is some piece of turf that somebody flipped over
819
00:49:11,040 --> 00:49:13,800
when they were building the building.
820
00:49:13,800 --> 00:49:17,280
So, even though you can't see this on the surface at all here,
821
00:49:17,280 --> 00:49:22,120
- the turf itself is just under the surface about ten centimetres.
- OK.
822
00:49:22,120 --> 00:49:25,400
So, it's definitely affecting the plants that are on the surface.
823
00:49:25,400 --> 00:49:29,800
So, this little layer of turf down here is affecting the plants
824
00:49:29,800 --> 00:49:32,280
on the surface and that's visible from space?
825
00:49:32,280 --> 00:49:34,320
400 miles in space.
826
00:49:34,320 --> 00:49:36,400
- It's amazing.
- That's really crazy.
827
00:49:36,400 --> 00:49:37,840
THEY LAUGH
828
00:49:40,200 --> 00:49:44,040
To show Sarah what one of the buried turf walls actually looks like,
829
00:49:44,040 --> 00:49:46,600
the team has already started digging one up.
830
00:49:48,200 --> 00:49:49,840
What is going on here?
831
00:49:49,840 --> 00:49:53,520
Here, in the middle of it, we actually have a wall feature,
832
00:49:53,520 --> 00:49:56,560
which you indicated on your satellite.
833
00:49:56,560 --> 00:49:58,080
So, she is completely right.
834
00:49:58,080 --> 00:50:00,200
The satellites are right. They delivered.
835
00:50:00,200 --> 00:50:02,400
Yes. On this one, they sure did.
836
00:50:02,400 --> 00:50:06,360
A section cut within the wall offers further clues.
837
00:50:07,520 --> 00:50:11,440
You can see the striations of the turf in here.
838
00:50:11,440 --> 00:50:15,440
It will be a useful guide for Sarah to look for in North America.
839
00:50:15,440 --> 00:50:18,520
So, this is Sarah's wall? Is that exciting, Sarah?
840
00:50:18,520 --> 00:50:23,560
It's cool to learn that satellites can be used in a completely new area
841
00:50:23,560 --> 00:50:25,280
to find things much smaller -
842
00:50:25,280 --> 00:50:29,000
and here, too, we're dealing with about 15 centimetres.
843
00:50:29,000 --> 00:50:32,920
But this wall is dense enough to affect the overlying vegetation,
844
00:50:32,920 --> 00:50:34,600
so it can be detected from space.
845
00:50:34,600 --> 00:50:36,720
So, that's a really cool thing to learn.
846
00:50:40,240 --> 00:50:41,960
But it's not just this trench
847
00:50:41,960 --> 00:50:44,960
that has come up with evidence of human activity.
848
00:50:44,960 --> 00:50:50,080
Every flag shows a turf structure that Sarah spotted from space...
849
00:50:50,080 --> 00:50:54,320
and every blob shows a buried building beneath the surface.
850
00:51:00,120 --> 00:51:05,320
Here, at this site, in this vast landscape, we've had a big win.
851
00:51:05,320 --> 00:51:10,200
We know satellite imagery works here and that makes me wonder
852
00:51:10,200 --> 00:51:12,520
what's left to find in North America.
853
00:51:17,760 --> 00:51:21,200
The other key to unlocking the secrets of Sarah's new site
854
00:51:21,200 --> 00:51:25,520
is evidence of metalworking, just like at L'Anse aux Meadows,
855
00:51:25,520 --> 00:51:28,320
the most westerly settlement discovered so far.
856
00:51:31,560 --> 00:51:35,040
So, we're both going to take a crash course in what to look for.
857
00:51:50,320 --> 00:51:54,080
Master blacksmith Jonas Bigler is going to show me how the Vikings
858
00:51:54,080 --> 00:51:56,440
made nails to repair their boats.
859
00:52:05,240 --> 00:52:07,000
Do you think I can try and make a nail?
860
00:52:07,000 --> 00:52:08,200
I'm sure you can.
861
00:52:08,200 --> 00:52:09,720
OK, let's try it.
862
00:52:09,720 --> 00:52:12,080
Wherever the Vikings went they needed nails
863
00:52:12,080 --> 00:52:13,760
to make repairs to their ships.
864
00:52:13,760 --> 00:52:17,840
Without them, their expansion would never have been possible.
865
00:52:18,840 --> 00:52:20,800
- Bit more charcoal on?
- Yeah.
866
00:52:22,880 --> 00:52:24,640
OK, here we go.
867
00:52:28,120 --> 00:52:32,000
- OK, how's this?
- It's great!
- OK, here we go.
868
00:52:38,600 --> 00:52:42,160
An ocean-going ship needed 4,000 nails,
869
00:52:42,160 --> 00:52:45,280
and that required ten tonnes of iron ore
870
00:52:45,280 --> 00:52:48,920
from a source known to the Vikings as bog iron.
871
00:52:51,960 --> 00:52:54,920
While I grapple with hot metal, Sarah is exploring
872
00:52:54,920 --> 00:52:57,400
the kind of evidence for Viking metalworking
873
00:52:57,400 --> 00:52:59,240
that she might find in America.
874
00:53:01,720 --> 00:53:05,920
- So, here we have a bucket of the actual iron ore.
- Yeah.
875
00:53:05,920 --> 00:53:07,760
Bog iron.
876
00:53:07,760 --> 00:53:09,440
It's really crumbly.
877
00:53:09,440 --> 00:53:11,720
It's full of impurities, basically.
878
00:53:11,720 --> 00:53:15,840
And this is then roasted to extract any impurities
879
00:53:15,840 --> 00:53:18,400
to get better iron from the ore.
880
00:53:18,400 --> 00:53:21,840
Once roasted, the purified ore would be placed in a furnace
881
00:53:21,840 --> 00:53:26,960
to drive off even more impurities, producing refined iron
882
00:53:26,960 --> 00:53:29,280
and the waste product, slag.
883
00:53:29,280 --> 00:53:31,840
So, here you have the type of slag you get
884
00:53:31,840 --> 00:53:33,960
at the bottom of the furnace.
885
00:53:33,960 --> 00:53:36,000
If you have a smithy at the site,
886
00:53:36,000 --> 00:53:38,680
this is actually what you might find from the hearth.
887
00:53:38,680 --> 00:53:41,840
I don't know if we'll get that lucky this season - but one can hope.
888
00:53:41,840 --> 00:53:43,760
One can hope. Well...
889
00:53:43,760 --> 00:53:46,560
- This here is the hammer scale...
- OK.
890
00:53:46,560 --> 00:53:49,880
..and this is what you would find around a blacksmith's anvil,
891
00:53:49,880 --> 00:53:52,680
where they actually work the iron.
892
00:53:52,680 --> 00:53:57,400
And you can test it to see the iron content of it.
893
00:53:57,400 --> 00:54:00,040
- Oh, yeah. Look, it just jumps right on.
- Yeah, yeah.
894
00:54:00,040 --> 00:54:02,960
But even at these home-smelting sites for a single farm,
895
00:54:02,960 --> 00:54:06,640
you get a large amount of slag and by-products.
896
00:54:09,840 --> 00:54:14,160
Oh, I can really feel it in the old shoulder already.
897
00:54:14,160 --> 00:54:18,120
A master blacksmith could make a nail in under a minute.
898
00:54:20,280 --> 00:54:22,920
- How are we looking?
- It's better.
899
00:54:22,920 --> 00:54:25,200
I'm ten minutes in.
900
00:54:29,120 --> 00:54:31,640
There we go, look at that!
901
00:54:31,640 --> 00:54:34,200
Now, the all-important head of the nail.
902
00:54:38,640 --> 00:54:41,000
It's not the best nail I've ever seen in my life.
903
00:54:41,000 --> 00:54:42,600
You've just started.
904
00:54:42,600 --> 00:54:44,160
THEY LAUGH
905
00:54:44,160 --> 00:54:46,280
Compare it here.
906
00:54:46,280 --> 00:54:48,440
That's what supposed to look like!
907
00:54:52,680 --> 00:54:54,240
It has been so incredibly helpful,
908
00:54:54,240 --> 00:54:57,160
because I've gotten to see all the materials
909
00:54:57,160 --> 00:54:59,600
that would go into iron production.
910
00:54:59,600 --> 00:55:01,400
That may help me in my search
911
00:55:01,400 --> 00:55:04,200
for a possible Norse site in North America.
912
00:55:05,880 --> 00:55:09,400
SAGA IS SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
913
00:55:14,120 --> 00:55:17,320
Before we leave Iceland, I need to find out what prompted
914
00:55:17,320 --> 00:55:20,960
the next step in the Vikings' epic journey west.
915
00:55:20,960 --> 00:55:23,440
OLD NORSE CONTINUES
916
00:55:28,240 --> 00:55:31,800
This amazing gorge is the site of Thingvellir,
917
00:55:31,800 --> 00:55:34,760
Iceland's open-air Viking parliament.
918
00:55:35,840 --> 00:55:39,240
I'm meeting up again with saga expert Dr Emily Lethbridge.
919
00:55:41,840 --> 00:55:44,960
This is the site of oldest parliament in the world.
920
00:55:44,960 --> 00:55:46,360
Would they meet in this ravine
921
00:55:46,360 --> 00:55:48,720
because it's like a parliament chamber, almost?
922
00:55:48,720 --> 00:55:50,320
The sound bounces off the sides.
923
00:55:50,320 --> 00:55:54,160
It is an extraordinary natural amphitheatre.
924
00:55:54,160 --> 00:55:56,440
And there's great acoustics.
925
00:55:56,440 --> 00:55:58,760
OLD NORSE IS SPOKEN
926
00:56:00,560 --> 00:56:04,080
It isn't just the acoustics that make this place special.
927
00:56:05,600 --> 00:56:10,720
This is a natural fault line. We are on the point where the two plates -
928
00:56:10,720 --> 00:56:15,000
- the North American and the Eurasian tectonic plates meet.
- You're joking!
929
00:56:15,000 --> 00:56:17,840
- So, this is the fault between the two of them?
- This is the fault line.
930
00:56:17,840 --> 00:56:20,560
So, you and I are standing in between Eurasia and North America
931
00:56:20,560 --> 00:56:22,680
- at the moment.
- We are. One foot on two continents.
932
00:56:22,680 --> 00:56:26,040
Isn't that amazing, that the Vikings who were the first Eurasians
933
00:56:26,040 --> 00:56:29,200
to explore North America, ended up having one of their parliaments
934
00:56:29,200 --> 00:56:31,320
on the actual divide between the two?
935
00:56:33,640 --> 00:56:39,240
Each year in June, chieftains from across Iceland would gather here.
936
00:56:39,240 --> 00:56:42,480
I guess people think of the Vikings as a bit violent, a bit chaotic -
937
00:56:42,480 --> 00:56:45,200
- in fact, this is very sophisticated.
- Yeah.
938
00:56:45,200 --> 00:56:47,560
What kind of things would be discussed and debated
939
00:56:47,560 --> 00:56:49,280
at these parliaments?
940
00:56:49,280 --> 00:56:54,880
Sentences of outlawry would be imposed on members of society
941
00:56:54,880 --> 00:56:58,080
- who had broken all of the rules.
- You were sent away from Iceland?
942
00:56:58,080 --> 00:57:01,200
You could go anywhere else, but you couldn't set foot on Iceland
943
00:57:01,200 --> 00:57:03,480
for the period that the outlawry stood.
944
00:57:04,640 --> 00:57:08,040
And it was exile that launched the most astonishing chapter
945
00:57:08,040 --> 00:57:09,840
in Viking exploration.
946
00:57:11,560 --> 00:57:15,240
According to the sagas, in 982 AD,
947
00:57:15,240 --> 00:57:20,360
the murderer Erik the Red was banished again.
948
00:57:20,360 --> 00:57:25,640
Erik the Red was the first Icelander to discover Greenland
949
00:57:25,640 --> 00:57:28,120
and then make a permanent settlement there.
950
00:57:28,120 --> 00:57:30,600
So, because he had been thrown out of everywhere else,
951
00:57:30,600 --> 00:57:32,880
he decided to start his own colony somewhere.
952
00:57:32,880 --> 00:57:35,240
They were people who took chances
953
00:57:35,240 --> 00:57:39,840
and were prepared to undergo huge physical trials,
954
00:57:39,840 --> 00:57:43,000
such as sailing in open boats across the Atlantic,
955
00:57:43,000 --> 00:57:44,720
to see what they could find.
956
00:57:49,600 --> 00:57:51,320
It was the adventurous,
957
00:57:51,320 --> 00:57:55,320
entrepreneurial spirit of these people that drove them on.
958
00:57:56,440 --> 00:58:02,040
Erik the Red turned the shattering blow of exile into an opportunity.
959
00:58:04,120 --> 00:58:06,760
It's time for me to head to Greenland
960
00:58:06,760 --> 00:58:10,360
in the footsteps, once again, of Erik the Red
961
00:58:10,360 --> 00:58:15,320
and for Sarah to finally join her team in North America.
962
00:58:20,120 --> 00:58:24,360
I am walking to Point Rosee for the first time
963
00:58:24,360 --> 00:58:28,960
after many, many months of looking at satellite imagery.
964
00:58:31,080 --> 00:58:34,040
At last, the news finally arrives.
965
00:58:34,040 --> 00:58:36,840
Sarah has permission to dig for just two weeks
966
00:58:36,840 --> 00:58:38,480
at the site in Newfoundland.
967
00:58:40,160 --> 00:58:43,600
I really had no idea it would be this dramatic.
968
00:58:43,600 --> 00:58:45,680
Absolutely no idea, at all.
969
00:58:48,160 --> 00:58:52,000
The search for the Vikings is about to reach its climax.
970
00:58:53,640 --> 00:58:58,080
Will all the effort, the hunting along thousands of miles of coast,
971
00:58:58,080 --> 00:59:00,480
the surveying at the new site
972
00:59:00,480 --> 00:59:03,800
and the successes in Scotland and Iceland,
973
00:59:03,800 --> 00:59:06,360
bear fruit at Point Rosee?
974
00:59:09,600 --> 00:59:15,120
Will the faint lines on an image taken from 383 miles above the Earth
975
00:59:15,120 --> 00:59:19,040
prove to be the most westerly Viking settlement ever discovered?
976
00:59:20,920 --> 00:59:23,280
SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
977
00:59:25,520 --> 00:59:31,560
Could this be where Leif Erikson beached his ships 1,000 years ago?
978
00:59:31,560 --> 00:59:34,240
OLD NORSE CONTINUES
979
00:59:37,600 --> 00:59:39,600
This is going to be fun.
980
00:59:39,600 --> 00:59:41,080
Here we go.
981
00:59:53,000 --> 00:59:57,360
After three days of digging, they have yet to find anything.
982
00:59:57,360 --> 01:00:01,160
They're focusing on a spot within the L-shaped structure
983
01:00:01,160 --> 01:00:02,800
on the satellite image.
984
01:00:04,600 --> 01:00:07,560
Sarah thinks it looks similar to one of the buildings
985
01:00:07,560 --> 01:00:09,640
at L'Anse aux Meadows...
986
01:00:09,640 --> 01:00:11,920
Pretty brutal.
987
01:00:11,920 --> 01:00:15,280
Oh, yeah. Looks like there's a whole layer of it down below.
988
01:00:19,360 --> 01:00:21,840
..but a few centimetres below the surface,
989
01:00:21,840 --> 01:00:23,480
they think they've found something.
990
01:00:23,480 --> 01:00:24,840
Ooh!
991
01:00:26,560 --> 01:00:28,000
It's sand.
992
01:00:28,000 --> 01:00:30,360
It's very sandy, it's yellowish grey.
993
01:00:31,880 --> 01:00:33,760
It's not a man-made deposit.
994
01:00:35,360 --> 01:00:38,120
It's painstaking and frustrating work,
995
01:00:38,120 --> 01:00:39,960
with only two weeks to dig.
996
01:00:42,360 --> 01:00:45,600
SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
997
01:00:45,600 --> 01:00:49,400
While Sarah searches for the most westerly Viking expansion,
998
01:00:49,400 --> 01:00:53,400
I'm tracking pioneer bad boy Erik the Red in the most remote
999
01:00:53,400 --> 01:00:55,480
of all the Viking colonies.
1000
01:00:57,440 --> 01:01:01,560
Greenland - the last stop before North America -
1001
01:01:01,560 --> 01:01:04,640
was a Viking homeland for 500 years.
1002
01:01:06,200 --> 01:01:09,040
Erik is supposed to have named it Greenland
1003
01:01:09,040 --> 01:01:11,400
to make it attractive to colonists,
1004
01:01:11,400 --> 01:01:13,600
even though it's covered in ice.
1005
01:01:13,600 --> 01:01:17,800
These icebergs look beautiful but they are a major danger to shipping,
1006
01:01:17,800 --> 01:01:19,880
just as they were back in Viking times -
1007
01:01:19,880 --> 01:01:22,240
and they're a very obvious reminder
1008
01:01:22,240 --> 01:01:26,360
that this water is absolutely icy cold.
1009
01:01:26,360 --> 01:01:28,680
If I fell in there without this suit on,
1010
01:01:28,680 --> 01:01:32,440
my life expectancy would be... a few minutes, at best.
1011
01:01:47,080 --> 01:01:49,840
I'm joining Christian Madsen and his team
1012
01:01:49,840 --> 01:01:52,960
searching for the most remote lost Viking sites
1013
01:01:52,960 --> 01:01:55,600
in the Uunartoq Fjord of South Greenland.
1014
01:01:57,840 --> 01:01:59,880
- Turn off the engine.
- OK.
1015
01:01:59,880 --> 01:02:01,720
I'm ready.
1016
01:02:08,920 --> 01:02:13,560
This valley was noted as a potential Viking site 80 years ago.
1017
01:02:17,400 --> 01:02:19,200
No-one has been back since -
1018
01:02:19,200 --> 01:02:21,520
but today we're stepping out again.
1019
01:02:22,720 --> 01:02:25,520
Look, there. There you have the first ruin.
1020
01:02:25,520 --> 01:02:28,360
- That's a ruin there?
- Yes, so now we know we are on the right side,
1021
01:02:28,360 --> 01:02:29,920
at least. That's a good thing.
1022
01:02:29,920 --> 01:02:32,400
- Is this it? You think this a site?
- Yes, this is a site.
1023
01:02:32,400 --> 01:02:34,280
Now we just need to find the farmhouse.
1024
01:02:34,280 --> 01:02:37,600
We've discovered a Viking settlement site! That's very exciting.
1025
01:02:37,600 --> 01:02:39,600
It's in a very dramatic place, as well.
1026
01:02:39,600 --> 01:02:42,600
- It's an amazing setting, isn't it?
- Yeah.
1027
01:02:42,600 --> 01:02:46,200
You can imagine that huge cliff face staring down...
1028
01:02:47,840 --> 01:02:50,840
- You see all the stones sticking up at the surface?
- Yeah.
1029
01:02:50,840 --> 01:02:53,000
That is building stones for the rooms,
1030
01:02:53,000 --> 01:02:54,920
so I think we have a farmhouse.
1031
01:02:54,920 --> 01:02:56,640
It looks massive.
1032
01:03:01,080 --> 01:03:02,760
It's the most fantastic thing,
1033
01:03:02,760 --> 01:03:05,240
coming to a new site, finding all the ruins.
1034
01:03:05,240 --> 01:03:07,560
You never know what you're going to find,
1035
01:03:07,560 --> 01:03:09,640
so it's always a big surprise for us.
1036
01:03:13,840 --> 01:03:16,400
Well, there's some darker soil here, now.
1037
01:03:16,400 --> 01:03:19,280
In order to date when the Vikings were actually here,
1038
01:03:19,280 --> 01:03:21,840
I'm gathering tiny flecks of charcoal,
1039
01:03:21,840 --> 01:03:26,480
from perhaps 1,000 years ago, with soil scientist Ian Simpson.
1040
01:03:28,240 --> 01:03:32,320
Funny life you lead, Ian. Because you spend a few months of the year
1041
01:03:32,320 --> 01:03:35,920
in the world's most remote and harshest landscapes
1042
01:03:35,920 --> 01:03:39,040
and the rest of the time in a lab back in Stirling
1043
01:03:39,040 --> 01:03:40,680
examining the results.
1044
01:03:40,680 --> 01:03:41,920
Yeah, I mean, it's great.
1045
01:03:41,920 --> 01:03:45,360
You've actually got a small piece of Viking history here in this tin -
1046
01:03:45,360 --> 01:03:48,960
- and that's what keeps you going through the winter!
- Yeah.
1047
01:03:50,160 --> 01:03:54,520
I'm getting into this, despite midges the size of Viking longships.
1048
01:03:55,680 --> 01:03:58,720
Hold on - a big piece.
1049
01:03:58,720 --> 01:04:01,080
Oh, yeah. Where did that come from?!
1050
01:04:01,080 --> 01:04:05,320
- Well, that...
- Look what he has found, this guy is good.
1051
01:04:05,320 --> 01:04:07,920
Brilliant - and that's easily datable.
1052
01:04:07,920 --> 01:04:10,800
- The carbon lab will be very pleased with that.
- Oh good, I'm glad.
1053
01:04:10,800 --> 01:04:14,040
- We can work with that.
- That's very exciting.
1054
01:04:14,040 --> 01:04:16,600
According to these guys, it is one of the most remote
1055
01:04:16,600 --> 01:04:17,840
Viking settlement sites
1056
01:04:17,840 --> 01:04:20,280
that have ever been found anywhere in Greenland
1057
01:04:20,280 --> 01:04:22,400
and to be here with them is so exciting,
1058
01:04:22,400 --> 01:04:24,720
as they are able to confirm this was a Viking site.
1059
01:04:24,720 --> 01:04:27,600
Just in the last few minutes, we - this small team -
1060
01:04:27,600 --> 01:04:29,200
has been able to add something
1061
01:04:29,200 --> 01:04:32,560
to the world's understanding of the Vikings.
1062
01:04:35,520 --> 01:04:38,320
We retire to our camp on Uunartoq Island,
1063
01:04:38,320 --> 01:04:41,480
the very place where the sundial compass was found
1064
01:04:41,480 --> 01:04:43,800
that might have led the Vikings here.
1065
01:04:53,240 --> 01:04:57,080
The northern lights are one of the treasures of the Arctic
1066
01:04:57,080 --> 01:05:01,040
but it was another highly prized treasure - walrus ivory -
1067
01:05:01,040 --> 01:05:05,920
that drew the Viking pioneers to settle in such a remote place.
1068
01:05:05,920 --> 01:05:08,920
Almost had an inexhaustible population of walrus,
1069
01:05:08,920 --> 01:05:13,480
so, maybe this colonisation was spearheaded by this sort of industry
1070
01:05:13,480 --> 01:05:15,920
that was aimed at European markets to begin with.
1071
01:05:15,920 --> 01:05:19,320
We are perhaps seeing quite determined hunters
1072
01:05:19,320 --> 01:05:22,040
and exploiters of natural resources.
1073
01:05:24,560 --> 01:05:29,240
So, they weren't just desperate men on the fringes of civilisation?
1074
01:05:29,240 --> 01:05:31,040
They were definitely entrepreneurs.
1075
01:05:31,040 --> 01:05:34,280
They knew exactly what they were doing and what they were going for,
1076
01:05:34,280 --> 01:05:38,040
and they settled all the best places from the beginning, it seems.
1077
01:05:40,040 --> 01:05:43,000
These Viking adventurers weren't impoverished farmers
1078
01:05:43,000 --> 01:05:44,840
at the edge of the world,
1079
01:05:44,840 --> 01:05:47,640
more like the pioneers of the American West,
1080
01:05:47,640 --> 01:05:50,120
constantly pushing the frontier forward.
1081
01:05:58,200 --> 01:06:00,200
It's eight days into the dig
1082
01:06:00,200 --> 01:06:03,240
for Sarah and HER pioneers over in America -
1083
01:06:03,240 --> 01:06:06,560
and they may finally have made a breakthrough.
1084
01:06:06,560 --> 01:06:08,560
Oh, that's a good sign.
1085
01:06:09,640 --> 01:06:13,840
Her colleague, Fred Schwarz, thinks he's found signs of human activity
1086
01:06:13,840 --> 01:06:17,560
inside the feature Sarah spotted from space.
1087
01:06:17,560 --> 01:06:19,720
Well, it's interesting.
1088
01:06:19,720 --> 01:06:23,440
We have quite a large boulder. It's cracked.
1089
01:06:23,440 --> 01:06:26,360
It's quite possible that it's fire cracked,
1090
01:06:26,360 --> 01:06:30,360
and it takes a pretty serious amount of heat
1091
01:06:30,360 --> 01:06:33,080
to crack a boulder this size.
1092
01:06:34,600 --> 01:06:37,000
Could it be evidence for metalworking?
1093
01:06:41,840 --> 01:06:45,400
Then Sarah finds what looks like a man-made fragment.
1094
01:06:46,680 --> 01:06:51,880
So, this looks like metalworking by-product - the head of a nail.
1095
01:06:53,040 --> 01:06:55,920
Hopefully, the first of many, many things we find.
1096
01:06:59,200 --> 01:07:02,880
This looks like typical Norse nails...
1097
01:07:04,800 --> 01:07:06,680
..and we've found this just now.
1098
01:07:07,920 --> 01:07:09,760
That's awesome.
1099
01:07:12,320 --> 01:07:14,760
That's classic slag
1100
01:07:14,760 --> 01:07:18,360
and what slag is, is a by-product of metal production...
1101
01:07:19,520 --> 01:07:24,800
..and there's dense amounts of metal and evidence of fire that's there.
1102
01:07:24,800 --> 01:07:27,120
So...
1103
01:07:27,120 --> 01:07:32,640
indigenous peoples here did not produce metal,
1104
01:07:32,640 --> 01:07:34,800
and now we have metal production.
1105
01:07:34,800 --> 01:07:37,160
This is a very good day indeed!
1106
01:07:41,000 --> 01:07:44,360
Day nine, and the ground keeps giving.
1107
01:07:45,840 --> 01:07:48,080
This thing...
1108
01:07:48,080 --> 01:07:51,360
which looks like an object as it was coming out of the ground,
1109
01:07:51,360 --> 01:07:53,400
is actually copper slag.
1110
01:07:53,400 --> 01:07:58,840
You've got copper pieces and little bits of iron inside it.
1111
01:07:58,840 --> 01:08:00,840
So, this is very, very heavy.
1112
01:08:04,240 --> 01:08:07,040
Within a few days, they have up to eight kilos
1113
01:08:07,040 --> 01:08:10,760
of what they think is metalworking by-product -
1114
01:08:10,760 --> 01:08:12,840
slag or bog iron.
1115
01:08:14,800 --> 01:08:17,640
It needs to be confirmed by experts
1116
01:08:17,640 --> 01:08:21,520
and it's not the only potential evidence turning up.
1117
01:08:21,520 --> 01:08:22,840
Oh!
1118
01:08:22,840 --> 01:08:25,640
They're even finding organic material.
1119
01:08:26,840 --> 01:08:28,840
It's a good sign that it's floating.
1120
01:08:28,840 --> 01:08:30,600
It's hard on the outside -
1121
01:08:30,600 --> 01:08:32,320
looks like a seed.
1122
01:08:32,320 --> 01:08:33,680
So, if this is a seed,
1123
01:08:33,680 --> 01:08:37,760
it's our first thing that we could do radiocarbon dating.
1124
01:08:42,000 --> 01:08:44,400
It looks charred.
1125
01:08:44,400 --> 01:08:48,160
The seed might just provide an all-important date for the site
1126
01:08:48,160 --> 01:08:49,920
that matches the Viking era.
1127
01:08:57,960 --> 01:09:02,920
With the emergence of these finds, Sarah is calling in reinforcements.
1128
01:09:02,920 --> 01:09:05,920
SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE
1129
01:09:10,680 --> 01:09:14,480
I'm still stalking Erik the Red's son Leif.
1130
01:09:14,480 --> 01:09:17,200
According to the sagas, around 1000 AD,
1131
01:09:17,200 --> 01:09:19,560
he blazed a trail through America.
1132
01:09:19,560 --> 01:09:21,040
But where did he go?
1133
01:09:21,040 --> 01:09:26,080
I'm joining Sarah in Newfoundland hopefully to find out.
1134
01:09:26,080 --> 01:09:27,800
It's so exciting.
1135
01:09:27,800 --> 01:09:31,240
Traversing hundreds of miles of this beautiful wilderness,
1136
01:09:31,240 --> 01:09:33,320
getting ever closer to Sarah and her site -
1137
01:09:33,320 --> 01:09:35,400
the excitement's really building.
1138
01:09:36,400 --> 01:09:38,560
No turf walls have turned up yet,
1139
01:09:38,560 --> 01:09:41,280
but the metalworking finds keep coming.
1140
01:09:43,080 --> 01:09:45,000
If it's what Sarah thinks it is
1141
01:09:45,000 --> 01:09:47,040
and there is evidence of Viking occupation,
1142
01:09:47,040 --> 01:09:49,360
well, I think it'll be one of the most important
1143
01:09:49,360 --> 01:09:52,080
archaeological discoveries this century -
1144
01:09:52,080 --> 01:09:56,400
and it is amazing, it's wonderful just to be playing a very small part
1145
01:09:56,400 --> 01:09:58,480
in this story. I feel really lucky.
1146
01:10:03,360 --> 01:10:05,760
Is the evidence enough to prove that Sarah's dig
1147
01:10:05,760 --> 01:10:09,320
is the most westerly Viking site ever to be discovered?
1148
01:10:12,080 --> 01:10:14,200
Sarah isn't a Viking expert,
1149
01:10:14,200 --> 01:10:18,360
so Dr Doug Bolender is also on his way to assess the finds.
1150
01:10:20,400 --> 01:10:23,120
It's that weird mix of being extremely excited
1151
01:10:23,120 --> 01:10:26,920
about the possibility and extremely sceptical
1152
01:10:26,920 --> 01:10:29,720
about actually finding something
1153
01:10:29,720 --> 01:10:32,840
that's going to change the way that we understand
1154
01:10:32,840 --> 01:10:35,440
what the Norse were doing in North America.
1155
01:10:38,200 --> 01:10:41,080
You know, you don't get that moment very often -
1156
01:10:41,080 --> 01:10:45,160
to walk out into a place that has the potential to change history.
1157
01:10:51,400 --> 01:10:55,160
Space archaeologist Sarah has discovered pyramids
1158
01:10:55,160 --> 01:10:57,080
where no-one else spotted them.
1159
01:10:59,120 --> 01:11:02,480
If she can convince Doug she's found a Viking site,
1160
01:11:02,480 --> 01:11:06,200
then she may be on the verge of another world-beating discovery.
1161
01:11:07,360 --> 01:11:08,640
First we hit this rock -
1162
01:11:08,640 --> 01:11:10,960
we didn't know that it was fire cracked, at first -
1163
01:11:10,960 --> 01:11:12,600
just cos it was so covered in muck.
1164
01:11:12,600 --> 01:11:16,320
And we started finding slag up here.
1165
01:11:16,320 --> 01:11:20,880
Dense, dense concentration of slag here.
1166
01:11:20,880 --> 01:11:23,000
Well, it looks like a spot where, you know,
1167
01:11:23,000 --> 01:11:24,720
you would be doing iron smelting -
1168
01:11:24,720 --> 01:11:29,120
and so the question really comes down to, who is doing it here?
1169
01:11:29,120 --> 01:11:31,600
And it doesn't look totally unfamiliar.
1170
01:11:31,600 --> 01:11:34,720
In the sense that, you know, these are the kinds of features
1171
01:11:34,720 --> 01:11:40,400
that you often see for ironworking within Norse contexts.
1172
01:11:40,400 --> 01:11:42,680
I want to see what's around this,
1173
01:11:42,680 --> 01:11:47,560
because when you have a dug-in feature full of slag
1174
01:11:47,560 --> 01:11:51,480
with pretty obviously fire-altered rock,
1175
01:11:51,480 --> 01:11:55,880
you've got evidence of somebody doing something on this spot.
1176
01:11:55,880 --> 01:11:58,360
What would be really interesting is to open this up more
1177
01:11:58,360 --> 01:12:00,040
and it would make it much more clear.
1178
01:12:02,320 --> 01:12:05,560
Sarah excavated inside the L-shaped feature
1179
01:12:05,560 --> 01:12:07,640
she first spotted from space.
1180
01:12:09,280 --> 01:12:12,600
Doug now wants to open up the feature itself.
1181
01:12:20,560 --> 01:12:22,920
Meanwhile, I'm hard on Doug's heels
1182
01:12:22,920 --> 01:12:26,240
making the hour-long trek to Sarah's site at Point Rosee.
1183
01:12:34,240 --> 01:12:38,800
If Leif Erikson came here, he did so just after the first millennium.
1184
01:12:39,840 --> 01:12:44,280
Around the same time that a Viking, Cnut, became king of England.
1185
01:12:45,360 --> 01:12:49,480
It marked the peak of Viking expansion in Europe and America.
1186
01:12:52,280 --> 01:12:56,680
Am I now on a path once trod by the Vikings?
1187
01:12:58,800 --> 01:13:02,520
- Sarah!
- Hey, Dan. Welcome! Good to see you, man
1188
01:13:02,520 --> 01:13:05,240
- How are you? What have you found?
- Oh, boy!
1189
01:13:05,240 --> 01:13:09,760
- This has been a very exciting couple of weeks.
- Yeah?
1190
01:13:09,760 --> 01:13:11,920
It's a good time to turn up.
1191
01:13:13,280 --> 01:13:16,440
Astonishingly, the feature Sarah saw from space
1192
01:13:16,440 --> 01:13:18,760
may be emerging from the ground.
1193
01:13:21,400 --> 01:13:23,800
Do you think it's telling us anything, this surface?
1194
01:13:23,800 --> 01:13:28,640
Yeah, indeed. It looks like there is a great deal of structure.
1195
01:13:28,640 --> 01:13:30,920
- There's banding...
- Yeah, these bands,
1196
01:13:30,920 --> 01:13:32,520
what are these black bands here?
1197
01:13:32,520 --> 01:13:35,120
Well, what this looks like is it looks like turf blocks
1198
01:13:35,120 --> 01:13:38,120
that have been put and cut and placed here.
1199
01:13:38,120 --> 01:13:41,560
There are actually sheets of turf that are here.
1200
01:13:41,560 --> 01:13:43,360
So, someone's made a wall using turf?
1201
01:13:43,360 --> 01:13:45,720
That is what it looks like.
1202
01:13:47,200 --> 01:13:48,600
Who would do a thing like that?!
1203
01:13:48,600 --> 01:13:51,160
- THEY LAUGH
- Dun-dun-DUN!
1204
01:13:51,160 --> 01:13:56,320
So, you've dug turf walls all over the North Atlantic, right?
1205
01:13:56,320 --> 01:13:57,880
Do they look like this?
1206
01:13:57,880 --> 01:14:02,200
Actually, they look similar to this, and that is what
1207
01:14:02,200 --> 01:14:05,880
we need to do a little bit more digging to figure out.
1208
01:14:05,880 --> 01:14:11,720
So, it's amazing that turf in amongst some other turf
1209
01:14:11,720 --> 01:14:12,760
shows up from space.
1210
01:14:12,760 --> 01:14:15,680
- Whatever it is you picked up on the remote sensing...
- Yep.
1211
01:14:15,680 --> 01:14:18,480
..you picked up something that's actually here.
1212
01:14:22,360 --> 01:14:26,320
Doug arrived a sceptic, but he's converted to the cause.
1213
01:14:27,400 --> 01:14:29,920
Right now, the simplest answer
1214
01:14:29,920 --> 01:14:33,960
is that it looks like a small activity area,
1215
01:14:33,960 --> 01:14:37,400
maybe connected to a larger farm...
1216
01:14:37,400 --> 01:14:39,360
that's Norse.
1217
01:14:39,360 --> 01:14:41,440
You sort of have to explain that away.
1218
01:14:41,440 --> 01:14:42,960
If we were in Iceland,
1219
01:14:42,960 --> 01:14:46,600
I wouldn't think twice about what was happening here.
1220
01:14:46,600 --> 01:14:48,680
The thing that really makes you pause,
1221
01:14:48,680 --> 01:14:52,040
the thing that really makes you want to check
1222
01:14:52,040 --> 01:14:54,200
every last little bit of it,
1223
01:14:54,200 --> 01:14:56,920
is that it's in Newfoundland.
1224
01:14:56,920 --> 01:14:59,560
I'm feeling very excited, I'm feeling very good.
1225
01:14:59,560 --> 01:15:02,680
They have dug exactly where Sarah told them to dig
1226
01:15:02,680 --> 01:15:06,600
and they found what looks like a furnace and the wall of a building.
1227
01:15:06,600 --> 01:15:09,920
Now, as far as I'm concerned, that's a Viking settlement.
1228
01:15:11,000 --> 01:15:14,000
I am just thrilled having the Norse specialist here
1229
01:15:14,000 --> 01:15:16,040
say that the turf wall that we found,
1230
01:15:16,040 --> 01:15:19,200
just in the area where the satellite images showed it should be,
1231
01:15:19,200 --> 01:15:22,760
was there, and he said it looks like Norse turf.
1232
01:15:25,800 --> 01:15:29,840
Turf suggests the settlement might just be Viking -
1233
01:15:29,840 --> 01:15:33,960
but proof will come from the metalwork and from ageing the site.
1234
01:15:36,640 --> 01:15:41,720
So, the seeds are sent off for radiocarbon dating.
1235
01:15:41,720 --> 01:15:44,880
We're hoping for anything around 1000 AD.
1236
01:15:44,880 --> 01:15:47,200
The metalwork is also on its way.
1237
01:15:55,160 --> 01:15:58,400
It's the start of an excruciating two-week wait
1238
01:15:58,400 --> 01:16:00,280
for the results to come through.
1239
01:16:01,520 --> 01:16:05,400
For me, it's remarkable to think Vikings and Brits
1240
01:16:05,400 --> 01:16:09,080
could have sailed the 2,000 miles all the way
1241
01:16:09,080 --> 01:16:11,440
to what is now North America.
1242
01:16:15,400 --> 01:16:19,360
It would be astonishing to finally have the dating proof.
1243
01:16:24,440 --> 01:16:27,760
Two weeks later, the dates have come through.
1244
01:16:30,200 --> 01:16:34,800
You know, we've been working almost a year on processing all this data
1245
01:16:34,800 --> 01:16:36,760
and we've spent a month in the field,
1246
01:16:36,760 --> 01:16:39,920
so I've actually been having trouble sleeping the last couple of nights,
1247
01:16:39,920 --> 01:16:42,680
cos I know the radiocarbon results are in
1248
01:16:42,680 --> 01:16:45,280
and I'm about to find out one way or the other.
1249
01:16:49,720 --> 01:16:51,440
- Hey, Dan.
- Hey.
1250
01:16:51,440 --> 01:16:52,680
What's going on?
1251
01:16:52,680 --> 01:16:54,200
HE SIGHS HEAVILY
1252
01:16:54,200 --> 01:16:57,920
Just waiting. The waiting game. It's like D-Day.
1253
01:16:59,400 --> 01:17:00,760
So...
1254
01:17:02,160 --> 01:17:04,240
I'm feeling a little nervous. How are you doing?
1255
01:17:04,240 --> 01:17:06,360
I'm very nervous.
1256
01:17:06,360 --> 01:17:09,240
It's funny, like...
1257
01:17:09,240 --> 01:17:12,360
if the dates are good, I'll be happy.
1258
01:17:12,360 --> 01:17:14,560
You know, and if they're really off,
1259
01:17:14,560 --> 01:17:17,360
there are more questions than answers.
1260
01:17:17,360 --> 01:17:19,640
Yeah, if they are bang on, it would be amazing.
1261
01:17:21,800 --> 01:17:24,800
It would just be really good to have the dates work out.
1262
01:17:24,800 --> 01:17:27,640
- That's good.
- So, are you ready?
1263
01:17:27,640 --> 01:17:29,360
OK, let's do it!
1264
01:17:36,760 --> 01:17:38,480
Here we go.
1265
01:17:53,400 --> 01:17:55,280
It's a lot more recent.
1266
01:17:58,520 --> 01:18:00,280
Yeah, it says 1600s.
1267
01:18:00,280 --> 01:18:01,960
1800s.
1268
01:18:03,400 --> 01:18:06,600
Which makes no sense, given what we have.
1269
01:18:07,680 --> 01:18:10,560
I mean, there's no way that this is a modern site.
1270
01:18:10,560 --> 01:18:12,760
You saw the conditions at that site.
1271
01:18:12,760 --> 01:18:14,880
You know, lots of mixing.
1272
01:18:14,880 --> 01:18:17,920
Lots of potential later intrusions,
1273
01:18:17,920 --> 01:18:20,360
especially with the amount of water that was there.
1274
01:18:20,360 --> 01:18:25,520
That berry... Those berries were not from a particularly strong context.
1275
01:18:25,520 --> 01:18:26,640
- Yeah.
- Um...
1276
01:18:26,640 --> 01:18:28,680
So, the seeds could have just drifted down
1277
01:18:28,680 --> 01:18:30,440
through the layers over the years?
1278
01:18:30,440 --> 01:18:32,720
Yeah, or you know, things could have been exposed.
1279
01:18:32,720 --> 01:18:36,320
But the reality is, those dates
1280
01:18:36,320 --> 01:18:40,120
don't match the archaeology, at all.
1281
01:18:40,120 --> 01:18:44,040
And so, you know, given what we have with the turf walls
1282
01:18:44,040 --> 01:18:46,880
- and the smelting and everything else...
- I still believe in you.
1283
01:18:46,880 --> 01:18:50,160
Don't worry. I agree. Everything else screams "Viking".
1284
01:18:57,720 --> 01:18:59,600
It needs a lot more work.
1285
01:19:07,800 --> 01:19:11,640
After all the effort over the last 12 months,
1286
01:19:11,640 --> 01:19:13,760
are these dates the full story?
1287
01:19:15,000 --> 01:19:17,200
I trust Sarah's science.
1288
01:19:18,400 --> 01:19:22,040
In the past, I've worked with her to discover iconic monuments.
1289
01:19:23,640 --> 01:19:26,760
In the more challenging terrain of the North Atlantic,
1290
01:19:26,760 --> 01:19:31,360
she has found buried structures in Scotland and Iceland.
1291
01:19:31,360 --> 01:19:35,920
The evidence on the satellite image of Point Rosee looked convincing.
1292
01:19:35,920 --> 01:19:38,360
The exact same size as the long houses
1293
01:19:38,360 --> 01:19:40,360
- at L'Anse aux Meadows.
- No way!
1294
01:19:41,880 --> 01:19:45,520
All this evidence, plus the eight kilos of possible metalwork,
1295
01:19:45,520 --> 01:19:48,720
just doesn't tally with the dates from the seeds.
1296
01:19:49,880 --> 01:19:51,760
Doug doesn't see it as a setback.
1297
01:19:53,840 --> 01:19:55,800
I've actually always been very sceptical
1298
01:19:55,800 --> 01:19:58,160
about the potential for radiocarbon on the site.
1299
01:19:58,160 --> 01:20:01,600
The preservation is very poor for any organics,
1300
01:20:01,600 --> 01:20:04,360
and the samples that were available
1301
01:20:04,360 --> 01:20:08,880
are not very closely associated with the actual activity.
1302
01:20:08,880 --> 01:20:14,040
So, the seeds - it's not even clear that they were charred
1303
01:20:14,040 --> 01:20:16,840
and they're coming out of material
1304
01:20:16,840 --> 01:20:20,320
that's at the upper levels of this feature.
1305
01:20:24,560 --> 01:20:26,440
So, it's down to the metalwork,
1306
01:20:26,440 --> 01:20:29,240
and we'll now double-check every other finding.
1307
01:20:31,120 --> 01:20:33,280
When we set out to do this project work,
1308
01:20:33,280 --> 01:20:36,800
our basic hypothesis was that we wouldn't find anything
1309
01:20:36,800 --> 01:20:40,200
and I think we've proven ourselves wrong -
1310
01:20:40,200 --> 01:20:44,400
but now I really want the site to be Norse,
1311
01:20:44,400 --> 01:20:46,800
because I don't know what else it could be!
1312
01:20:48,000 --> 01:20:50,160
So, Sarah assembles a crack team.
1313
01:20:50,160 --> 01:20:53,960
It's our last chance to prove that Point Rosee is a Viking site.
1314
01:20:56,520 --> 01:20:59,680
Dr Tom Birch, a specialist in Viking metallurgy,
1315
01:20:59,680 --> 01:21:02,200
will analyse the metalworking debris.
1316
01:21:02,200 --> 01:21:04,880
- It looks like they're mostly quartz.
- Yeah.
1317
01:21:04,880 --> 01:21:10,000
He'll work with a world-renowned laboratory at Aberdeen University.
1318
01:21:10,000 --> 01:21:13,720
Doug Bolender will review all Sarah's findings...
1319
01:21:15,520 --> 01:21:17,520
..and we'll explore if anyone else
1320
01:21:17,520 --> 01:21:19,800
could have forged metal at Point Rosee.
1321
01:21:21,280 --> 01:21:24,520
No indigenous group ever produced it,
1322
01:21:24,520 --> 01:21:28,480
so we turn to Newfoundland historian, Dr Olaf Janzen,
1323
01:21:28,480 --> 01:21:31,520
to ask about more recent settlers.
1324
01:21:31,520 --> 01:21:33,720
When did the first settlers arrive?
1325
01:21:33,720 --> 01:21:36,040
There were probably Basque fishermen
1326
01:21:36,040 --> 01:21:38,920
passing through the area and fishing seasonally,
1327
01:21:38,920 --> 01:21:41,880
but the first settlers came in the early 18th century.
1328
01:21:41,880 --> 01:21:46,480
So, would these settlers have been making their own metal tools?
1329
01:21:46,480 --> 01:21:49,400
I came across no evidence of that.
1330
01:21:49,400 --> 01:21:53,600
I have a document here that was published in 1763
1331
01:21:53,600 --> 01:21:59,920
and it describes the account of an officer on the Lark frigate.
1332
01:21:59,920 --> 01:22:04,200
He mentions furs, he mentions the fish, he mentions timber.
1333
01:22:04,200 --> 01:22:07,280
There isn't any mention here of mineral resources.
1334
01:22:07,280 --> 01:22:09,840
So, if it wasn't the European settlers,
1335
01:22:09,840 --> 01:22:11,400
it wasn't the Basque fishermen,
1336
01:22:11,400 --> 01:22:13,600
how can we explain the evidence of metalwork?
1337
01:22:13,600 --> 01:22:16,560
You would have to go back to the site at L'Anse aux Meadows,
1338
01:22:16,560 --> 01:22:20,760
which is the only confirmed site of that vintage.
1339
01:22:20,760 --> 01:22:25,720
There we do have examples of bog iron being smelted -
1340
01:22:25,720 --> 01:22:28,080
worked into nails -
1341
01:22:28,080 --> 01:22:34,800
and that site is now perceived as a repair station for boats
1342
01:22:34,800 --> 01:22:37,920
going further on into the Gulf of St Lawrence -
1343
01:22:37,920 --> 01:22:41,240
and your site is in the Gulf of St Lawrence.
1344
01:22:41,240 --> 01:22:42,960
So, it's entirely plausible.
1345
01:22:49,400 --> 01:22:51,320
Judgment day has finally arrived
1346
01:22:51,320 --> 01:22:53,680
for the Newfoundland Point Rosee site.
1347
01:22:55,040 --> 01:22:56,160
After three weeks,
1348
01:22:56,160 --> 01:22:59,480
the emergency team has sifted through all the evidence.
1349
01:23:00,880 --> 01:23:05,680
Sarah and I have been summoned by Viking metal expert Tom Birch
1350
01:23:05,680 --> 01:23:08,040
for the results.
1351
01:23:08,040 --> 01:23:10,240
It's yet another nail-biting moment.
1352
01:23:12,280 --> 01:23:15,680
Well, some of the leads we had didn't turn out like we hoped.
1353
01:23:15,680 --> 01:23:19,080
We still... I don't think we still have the evidence that we need
1354
01:23:19,080 --> 01:23:20,560
to go to the world and say
1355
01:23:20,560 --> 01:23:23,720
there were Vikings on Point Rosee in Newfoundland.
1356
01:23:23,720 --> 01:23:25,720
So, a lot of it has come down to today.
1357
01:23:25,720 --> 01:23:27,400
This is a high pressure situation!
1358
01:23:27,400 --> 01:23:28,800
We're going to talk to Tom.
1359
01:23:28,800 --> 01:23:31,160
If Tom can come up with the evidence we need,
1360
01:23:31,160 --> 01:23:33,000
we can still save this project.
1361
01:23:39,760 --> 01:23:43,680
We analysed this item, which you suspected to be a metal object,
1362
01:23:43,680 --> 01:23:48,800
and then we also analysed some hammer scale, these small fragments
1363
01:23:48,800 --> 01:23:53,880
and then the last thing we analysed were these lumps of slag.
1364
01:23:53,880 --> 01:23:56,440
Now, I took this to the geologists
1365
01:23:56,440 --> 01:23:58,640
and when we cut a sample from it
1366
01:23:58,640 --> 01:24:02,760
there were some very bright, shiny inclusions,
1367
01:24:02,760 --> 01:24:06,080
which I thought were remnants of metal,
1368
01:24:06,080 --> 01:24:08,600
but actually this is a stone.
1369
01:24:08,600 --> 01:24:10,800
- OK...
- Welcome to archaeology!
1370
01:24:10,800 --> 01:24:13,360
- Exactly, yeah.
- Oh, well.
- But this isn't any old stone,
1371
01:24:13,360 --> 01:24:16,360
- this is over a billion years old, basically.
- So, hang on.
1372
01:24:16,360 --> 01:24:20,560
- This - one of our prized objects...
- Yeah.
- ..is a stone.
1373
01:24:20,560 --> 01:24:23,320
- It's a billion years old, that's nice...
- Yeah.
1374
01:24:23,320 --> 01:24:25,200
..but it doesn't tell us anything.
1375
01:24:25,200 --> 01:24:29,320
- What else have you got?
- The hammer scale isn't hammer scale.
1376
01:24:29,320 --> 01:24:33,320
These are little bits of iron oxide.
1377
01:24:33,320 --> 01:24:37,160
- So, our second vital clue...
- Yeah.
- ..turns out to be nothing, as well.
1378
01:24:37,160 --> 01:24:38,600
It's natural.
1379
01:24:42,840 --> 01:24:47,760
- I was fooled.
- OK. So, we are zero for two, at the moment.
- OK.
1380
01:24:47,760 --> 01:24:52,680
- You feeling nervous, Sarah?
- No, I'm not.
- OK. Well, I am!
1381
01:24:52,680 --> 01:24:56,320
That only leaves what Sarah thought to be slag,
1382
01:24:56,320 --> 01:24:59,840
the waste product from the metal refining process.
1383
01:24:59,840 --> 01:25:03,120
If this isn't evidence for Viking metalwork,
1384
01:25:03,120 --> 01:25:05,000
then we're well and truly stuffed.
1385
01:25:05,000 --> 01:25:09,560
- The smithying slag isn't smithying slag.
- OK.
1386
01:25:09,560 --> 01:25:14,280
But it is bog ore. Bog iron ore. OK.
1387
01:25:14,280 --> 01:25:17,960
- And there are some very interesting things about it.
- OK.
1388
01:25:17,960 --> 01:25:21,920
This has been collected and this has been roasted
1389
01:25:21,920 --> 01:25:23,800
to drive off the impurities.
1390
01:25:23,800 --> 01:25:27,040
The point is, this is being processed for something.
1391
01:25:27,040 --> 01:25:29,840
So, this is evidence for metalworking?
1392
01:25:29,840 --> 01:25:32,720
This is evidence for metallurgy.
1393
01:25:32,720 --> 01:25:37,760
Now, the only reason you roast ore is to later extract iron from it.
1394
01:25:39,720 --> 01:25:41,600
Sarah, this is pretty exciting right?
1395
01:25:41,600 --> 01:25:44,240
Because we've talked to historians who said nobody else
1396
01:25:44,240 --> 01:25:47,440
- was making metals on this coast ever in the whole of history...
- Yeah.
1397
01:25:47,440 --> 01:25:50,360
..apart from the Vikings. That sounds good to me.
1398
01:25:50,360 --> 01:25:52,080
So, it's got to be Viking!
1399
01:25:55,960 --> 01:25:58,440
- Sarah?
- All right! It's good!
1400
01:25:58,440 --> 01:26:00,120
We got there!
1401
01:26:03,840 --> 01:26:08,720
This fragment of bog iron ore is the proof we've been waiting for.
1402
01:26:08,720 --> 01:26:11,640
Hundreds of years before Columbus,
1403
01:26:11,640 --> 01:26:16,080
Viking pioneers like Leif Erikson came to Point Rosee.
1404
01:26:20,200 --> 01:26:23,640
They smelted metal here to service their ships
1405
01:26:23,640 --> 01:26:25,400
in workshops just like those
1406
01:26:25,400 --> 01:26:28,240
we've seen on our journey across the Atlantic.
1407
01:26:30,320 --> 01:26:34,800
It looks like this was another Viking refuelling station
1408
01:26:34,800 --> 01:26:37,360
beyond L'Anse aux Meadows.
1409
01:26:38,680 --> 01:26:41,240
It reinforces the idea that Vinland,
1410
01:26:41,240 --> 01:26:44,040
the mythical place in the Viking sagas,
1411
01:26:44,040 --> 01:26:48,200
is still out there to be discovered even further to the west.
1412
01:26:50,600 --> 01:26:55,000
Finally, we can all celebrate a breakthrough!
1413
01:26:55,000 --> 01:26:58,560
- Sarah.
- Yes.
- Without whom we would never have embarked
1414
01:26:58,560 --> 01:27:00,560
on this journey of discovery.
1415
01:27:01,560 --> 01:27:05,320
Viking Age explorers - they didn't leave much behind,
1416
01:27:05,320 --> 01:27:08,400
but they left just enough for Sarah to see it from space. So...
1417
01:27:08,400 --> 01:27:11,040
- I'll drink to that! Cheers.
- Cheers.
1418
01:27:11,040 --> 01:27:15,040
Without my incredible team, I wouldn't have been able to do this.
1419
01:27:15,040 --> 01:27:18,280
I'm right here, Sarah. I'm right here.
1420
01:27:18,280 --> 01:27:19,800
Dan, it goes without saying,
1421
01:27:19,800 --> 01:27:22,840
- that you will be with me on every adventure.
- Sure thing. Sure thing.
1422
01:27:22,840 --> 01:27:25,200
Hey, and here's to more Viking sites.
1423
01:27:25,200 --> 01:27:27,680
Let's make Doug's life a misery over the next few years.
1424
01:27:27,680 --> 01:27:30,320
- Let's keep him busy.
- Yes, yes, yes!
- Let's keep him busy.
1425
01:27:30,320 --> 01:27:32,440
I am so excited about this!
1426
01:27:32,440 --> 01:27:34,440
The thing that is amazing here
1427
01:27:34,440 --> 01:27:37,160
is to actually be in a moment of discovery -
1428
01:27:37,160 --> 01:27:39,920
and something that's brought people together.
1429
01:27:39,920 --> 01:27:41,280
It's extremely surprising
1430
01:27:41,280 --> 01:27:44,000
that an Egyptologist is the person who's finding this,
1431
01:27:44,000 --> 01:27:47,360
but, you know, it's actually always the person you least expect.
1432
01:27:49,080 --> 01:27:50,720
Well, it's been a long journey,
1433
01:27:50,720 --> 01:27:53,840
but today it feels like we've reached a point
1434
01:27:53,840 --> 01:27:55,480
in which we can be certain.
1435
01:27:55,480 --> 01:27:58,440
We can actually tell the world now, there were Vikings further west
1436
01:27:58,440 --> 01:28:00,240
than we've ever found them before
1437
01:28:00,240 --> 01:28:02,680
and that Sarah's research...
1438
01:28:02,680 --> 01:28:05,280
well, it might just have sparked a revolution
1439
01:28:05,280 --> 01:28:07,400
in our understanding of the Vikings.
1440
01:28:10,720 --> 01:28:12,360
I am absolutely thrilled.
1441
01:28:13,480 --> 01:28:17,520
Typically, in archaeology, you only ever get to write a footnote
1442
01:28:17,520 --> 01:28:19,040
in the history books -
1443
01:28:19,040 --> 01:28:21,760
but what we seem to have at Point Rosee,
1444
01:28:21,760 --> 01:28:24,520
may be the beginning of an entirely new chapter.121501
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