Archaeologists in Norway are about to dig up a Viking ship
Enlarge / If Scandinavian archaeology needed a logo, this outline would be a good one. (credit: NIKU)
A ground-penetrating radar survey in 2018 found a 20-meter Viking ship buried just beneath the surface of a farmer's field in Ostfold, Norway. At the time, archaeologists decided that the rare find was safest where it was. But recent analysis of a wood sample taken in 2019 reveals that although the ship looks remarkably well-preserved, it's actually being eaten away by fungus. And that means it's time for a rescue mission.
A Viking burialThe intended excavation is being led by archaeologist Jan Bill, curator of the Viking Ship Collection at Norway's Museum of Cultural History, and his colleagues at the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research (NIKU). When they start digging in June, they'll be the first archaeologists in a century to excavate a Viking ship.
The site, called Gjellestad, is especially interesting-and especially complicated. It's a ship from the period when Scandinavian seafarers were raiding and settling their way around the North Sea and Atlantic-but it's also the tomb of a Norse ruler. Ship graves of this size were built for persons from the uppermost echelons in society-we would tend to call them kings and queens today, possibly also jarls," Bill told Ars.
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