News - New Thoughts on the Demise of Greenland’s Norse Settlements - Archaeology Magazine
TASILIKULOOQ, GREENLAND—Science Magazine reports that the North Atlantic Biocultural Organization has analyzed data on the […]
archaeology.orgHere’s the latest I can share based on recent reporting up to 2026.
National Geographic (March 2026) highlights new archaeological clues about Greenland’s Norse, focusing on farm remnants and diet as researchers refine how their settlements declined around 1350–1450, with ongoing debates about climate stress versus trade and social factors.[4]
Ongoing scholarship continues to examine the role of walrus ivory trade and economic pressures in shifting Norse settlement patterns, alongside evidence from permafrost-preserved sites that is increasingly fragile due to thaw.[1][2]
For broader context, the traditional view remains that the Eastern Settlement around Brattahlíð was abandoned by mid‑15th century, but researchers stress that the full story likely involved multiple intertwined pressures including climate change, resource management, and Inuit interactions.[3][8]
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent complete articles and summarize any new findings in a brief digest with linked sources. I can also provide a quick timeline of key archaeological sites and their latest readings.
TASILIKULOOQ, GREENLAND—Science Magazine reports that the North Atlantic Biocultural Organization has analyzed data on the […]
archaeology.orgIn 1721, missionary Hans Egede sailed a ship called The Hope from Norway to Greenland, seeking Norse farmers whom Europeans hadn't heard from in 200 years in order to convert them to Protestantism. He...
pulitzercenter.orgArchaeologists have a new answer to the mystery of Greenland's Norse, who thrived for centuries and then vanished.
www.science.orgWhat happened? A group of seafaring Norse settlers from mainly Denmark, Sweden, and Norway in Scandinavia, established settlements in Greenland in the late 10th century (map below). These settlements were occupied for about 500 years before disappearing somewhat mysteriously in the middle of the 15th century. Archaeologists propose two main hypotheses for the Norse settler’s […]
www.science.smith.eduNew archaeological clues are shedding light on the fate of isolated Norse colonies in Greenland that disappeared during the Middle Ages.
www.nationalgeographic.com