A new analysis of the Hjortspring boat, an ancient wooden plank boat now on display in the National Museum of Denmark, has yielded clues to its potential origin—which has long been considered a ...
Add Popular Science (opens in a new tab) More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results.
Learn how chemical signatures in the Hjortspring boat’s caulking pointed researchers toward its Baltic origins. For more than a century, the Hjortspring boat has carried a lingering mystery. The 2,400 ...
More than a century after its discovery, Scandinavia’s oldest plank boat is finally giving up new secrets. By analyzing ancient caulking and cords from the Hjortspring boat, researchers uncovered ...
When an ancient ship was unearthed in Scandinavia over 100 years ago, archaeologists started to uncover bits and pieces of its history. On board the plank-built vessel was a hoard of weapons — swords, ...
Vikings Heading for Land, by Frank Dicksee (1873). Christie's via Wikimedia Around 2,400 years ago, before the emergence of the Roman empire, a small armada of boats approached the island of Als off ...
Around 2,400 years ago, a group of seafaring warriors attacked the island of Als, located off the coast of modern-day Denmark. The islanders successfully defended Als, and they ceremoniously sank ...
Comparison of Hjortspring boat (Above, 3D model by Richard Potter) with securely dated Bronze Age art (Rørby sword and Sagaholm rock art) as well as an example of early Iron Age art from Brastad.
For more than a century, the Hjortspring boat has carried a lingering mystery. The 2,400-year-old war canoe - discovered on the Danish island of Als and intentionally sunk after an attack involving ...
Photo of caulking fragment showing fingerprint on the left and high-resolution x-ray tomography scan of fingerprint region on the right. Photography by Erik Johansson, 3D model by Sahel Ganji. New ...