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Evidence of Viking Outpost Found in Canada
National Geographic News ^ | October 19, 2012 | Heather Pringle

Posted on 10/19/2012 6:11:45 PM PDT by Engraved-on-His-hands

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To: blueunicorn6

“It’s a little known fact that the Vikings were some of the best glass blowers in the world. The best way to validate this spot as Viking is to look for small, glass figurines of seals, moose and elephants.”

They still are.

http://www.visitsweden.com/sweden/Things-to-do/Shopping/World-famous-Swedish-glass/


81 posted on 10/21/2012 10:40:34 PM PDT by truth_seeker
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To: Just mythoughts
ALL the other supposed Norse sites ~ with words ~ are Swedish or Gothic, and not Norse at all.

Ask yourself some day, why is it that we have almost no records of 16th century North American ventures ~ just a handful of Spanish attempts at settlement, yet by 1604, according to the Treaty of London ~ right inside the treaty itself ~ they're working out a codicil for ALASKA ~

Yup, it'd been discovered ~ not the gold of course, but IT and its furs.

All the Swedish government records were in a building on the site of the present royal palace, and it burned to the ground about 1697. The Swedish government is still rebuilding its history by accessing all private records, land records, Bible notations, materials held abroad, etc.

There are an incredible number of Swedish traces all over what is now the United States ~ and there's the trace of a survey sponsored by North America's owner ~ to wit ~ Spain.

The simplest solution is the Swedes surveyed and sought access to furs, while the Spanish did a bit of development (grist mills, mines, trails, animal husbandry) ~and they did it together ~ or in conjunction with Spain's commercial interests.

if you sit in front of De'isles map of 1717, or maybe 1709, ask yourself 'How did he know' ~ there are things on those maps that NO ONE KNEW but the chief cartographer for France knew. I believe his great grandfather was Coligny, and Coligny had an incredibly intense interest in finding a Protestant homeland in America.

82 posted on 10/22/2012 4:01:04 AM PDT by muawiyah
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To: SunkenCiv
It makes sense to me the Vikings would move south primarily because the weather would be better and the land more fertile. On the other hand, finding evidence of them is very difficult in this climate and the forested landscape that existed back then.

Something as far north as Baffin Island strikes me as perhaps a trading or hunting post for furs or tusks.

83 posted on 10/22/2012 1:14:25 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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