Climate Change Didn't Cause Disappearance Of Vikings From Greenland, Study Says
Climate Change Didn't Cause Disappearance Of Vikings From Greenland, Study Says - The
Viking colonization of Greenland in the 10th century and their
mysterious abandonment of that colony 400 years later may have had
nothing to do with climate change as has been believed, a new study
argues.
Many scientists have suggested a "Medieval Warm Period" from the 10th
to the 12th centuries allowed Viking ships to travel from Iceland
across ice-free seas to Greenland to create settlements there -
settlements that were then abandoned by the mid-1400s when the climate
got colder in the "Little Ice Age" lasting from around 1300 up to 1850,
the theory says.
However, a new study suggests the so-called Medieval Warm Period wasn't all that warm in southern Greenland, researchers report in the journal Science Advances.
A geological analysis of rocks deposited by retreating glaciers all
but rules out variation in local Greenland climate as a reason for Norse
settlements there being abandoned, they report.
"We have found no reason to believe that it was any more warmer at the start of the colonization than at the end," says Columbia University glacial geologist Nicolas Young. "It looks like the climate was by and large pretty stable."
It is likely other factors played a part in leaving Greenland, he suggests.
The Norse settlements in Greenland date to around 985 when ships led
by Erik the Red voyaged from Iceland to southwestern Greenland.
At the height of the Viking settlements there, between 3,000 and
5,000 people lived in Greenland, but between 1360 and 1460 the
settlements disappeared, leaving only ruins - and a mystery.
Many scientists have long suggested climate variation between the time they arrived and when they left as a factor.
However, the geological analysis shows that during the time of the
beginning of the Viking presence in Greenland the extent of glaciers
there was about the same as during the subsequent Little Ice Age.
While there definitely was a Medieval Warm Period, there is
increasing evidence showing it was for the most part limited to
continental Europe, Young explains.
"It's becoming clearer that the Medieval Warm Period was patchy, not global," he says.
"The concept is Eurocentric [because] that's where the best known
observations were made. Elsewhere, the climate might not have been the
same."
The study suggests that the warm period never reached Greenland,
study researchers from Columbia and the University of Buffalo say.
"Our study suggests that when the Greenland Norse arrived, it was at
least as cold as when they left some 400 years later," Young argues. "If
the Vikings travelled to Greenland when it was cool, it's a stretch to
say deteriorating climate drove them out." Source: TechTimes
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