Researchers Discover Walruses Were Involved in the Mysterious Disappearance of Greenland's Norse Col
Researchers Discover Walruses Were Involved in the Mysterious Disappearance of Greenlands Norse Colonies
University Of Cambridge
By UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE JANUARY 6, 2020
Church ruins from Norse Greenlands Eastern Settlement. Credit: James H. Barrett
Over-Hunting Walruses Contributed to the Collapse of Norse Greenland
The mysterious disappearance of Greenlands Norse colonies sometime in the 15th century may have been down to the overexploitation of walrus populations for their tusks, according to a study of medieval artifacts from across Europe.
Founded by Erik the Red around 985AD after his exile from Iceland (or so the Sagas tell us), Norse communities in Greenland thrived for centuries even gaining a bishop before vanishing in the 1400s, leaving only ruins.
Latest research from the universities of Cambridge, Oslo and Trondheim has found that, for hundreds of years, almost all ivory traded across Europe came from walruses hunted in seas only accessible via Norse settlements in south-western Greenland.
Walrus ivory was a valuable medieval commodity, used to carve luxury items such as ornate crucifixes or pieces for games like chess and Viking favorite hnefatafl. The famous Lewis chessmen are made of walrus tusk.
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