![]() ![]() There are of course, other theories concerning the Viking presence in north America, but he doesn't vare for them and is dismissive of the majority of them. He has his opinions and his opinions are the right ones. ![]() He's clearly a very educated, and educated in all things Norse and Viking, man. ![]() I learned from this book that the author is a bit of a know-it-all. Eventually, a worsening climate and attacks by native peoples ended the first European presence in the New World. Other supposed Viking discoveries such as the Kensington Stone are dismissed as frauds, but legitimate finds from Arctic Canada to New England suggest Viking exploration far to the north and the south. Excavations at L'Anse aux Meadows in northern Newfoundland show that the Vikings did indeed reach the North American continent around A.D.1000, presumably from their base in Southern Greenland. Did Vinland, that mysterious "land of grapevines" that the Viking Leif Eriksson discovered and christened almost a thousand years ago, ever exist? Do the clues in the sagas of a North American location point to a specific place on a modern map? How much more of the New World may these pre-Columbian adventurers have explored? Drawing upon the clues found in ancient manuscripts and a deep knowledge of the historical and archaeological evidence, Wahlgren addresses these questions in a marvelously readable account. ![]()
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