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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,917 --> 00:00:05,000 NARRATOR: Powerful gods wielding advanced technology. 2 00:00:05,542 --> 00:00:07,958 GIORGIO TSOUKALOS: Odin sat on a throne 3 00:00:08,125 --> 00:00:11,167 with which he could see everything. 4 00:00:11,292 --> 00:00:15,708 NARRATOR: Strange creatures who craft extraordinary weapons. 5 00:00:15,875 --> 00:00:18,667 SCOTT MELLOR: Dwarves were the ones that create 6 00:00:18,833 --> 00:00:22,042 Odin's spear and Thor's hammer. 7 00:00:23,042 --> 00:00:26,375 NARRATOR: And descriptions of gateways through time and space. 8 00:00:26,542 --> 00:00:30,000 NICK POPE: Bifrost might be a sort of folkloric way 9 00:00:30,208 --> 00:00:32,000 of explaining a wormhole. 10 00:00:32,125 --> 00:00:34,333 NARRATOR: The ancient Norse legends 11 00:00:34,500 --> 00:00:36,542 read like modern science fiction, 12 00:00:36,708 --> 00:00:40,792 but could they be accounts of extraterrestrial beings 13 00:00:40,958 --> 00:00:44,333 who continue to visit our planet even now? 14 00:00:44,417 --> 00:00:46,667 WILLIAM HENRY: Contactees today describe encounters 15 00:00:46,875 --> 00:00:49,792 that precisely match Nordic mythology. 16 00:00:49,958 --> 00:00:52,458 ♪ ♪ 17 00:01:06,708 --> 00:01:08,750 NARRATOR: In Northern Europe lies a land 18 00:01:08,917 --> 00:01:13,708 of dramatic fjords and dense forests called Scandinavia. 19 00:01:13,833 --> 00:01:16,583 By most modern interpretations, 20 00:01:16,750 --> 00:01:20,542 Scandinavia includes the countries of Denmark, 21 00:01:20,708 --> 00:01:22,667 Norway, Sweden, 22 00:01:22,875 --> 00:01:25,333 Finland, and Iceland. 23 00:01:25,458 --> 00:01:28,542 And many centuries ago, this rugged landscape 24 00:01:28,708 --> 00:01:32,167 gave rise to a hearty and mysterious people 25 00:01:32,333 --> 00:01:34,542 called the Norse. 26 00:01:36,042 --> 00:01:37,417 In the early Bronze Age, 27 00:01:37,625 --> 00:01:39,625 there were a number of Germanic peoples that came up 28 00:01:39,792 --> 00:01:42,500 into this peninsula, the Scandinavian Peninsula. 29 00:01:42,708 --> 00:01:45,583 But they were meeting completely different people 30 00:01:45,750 --> 00:01:48,417 with a different culture and a very different language. 31 00:01:48,583 --> 00:01:51,917 Eventually, these groups of people come together 32 00:01:52,083 --> 00:01:54,042 and they become the Norse. 33 00:01:54,250 --> 00:01:55,667 NARRATOR: For many years, 34 00:01:55,833 --> 00:01:57,917 the Norse were a peaceful people 35 00:01:58,042 --> 00:02:00,500 who scratched out an existence as farmers, 36 00:02:00,667 --> 00:02:02,333 fishermen, and hunters. 37 00:02:02,542 --> 00:02:05,333 But that changed dramatically 38 00:02:05,458 --> 00:02:10,458 in the 8th century AD with the rise of the Vikings. 39 00:02:10,583 --> 00:02:13,167 KARL SEIGFRIED: "Viking" is a term for Scandinavian pirates 40 00:02:13,333 --> 00:02:15,500 and raiders who made their mark on world history 41 00:02:15,708 --> 00:02:18,500 between the late 700s and the early 1000s. 42 00:02:18,708 --> 00:02:20,542 MELLOR: One thing we have to understand 43 00:02:20,708 --> 00:02:23,208 is the Vikings technically is a profession. 44 00:02:23,375 --> 00:02:25,458 It isn't the people that were living there. 45 00:02:25,625 --> 00:02:28,458 Scholars call the people that were living there the Norse. 46 00:02:29,792 --> 00:02:31,792 The Vikings were the ones that went on raiding 47 00:02:31,875 --> 00:02:34,792 and trading expeditions. 48 00:02:37,208 --> 00:02:39,375 NARRATOR: Sailing on their fearsome longships, 49 00:02:39,542 --> 00:02:42,000 the Vikings terrorized Europe. 50 00:02:42,125 --> 00:02:43,875 They could strike anywhere 51 00:02:44,083 --> 00:02:46,500 and seemingly without warning. 52 00:02:48,042 --> 00:02:50,208 The Viking longship, uh, were excellent ships 53 00:02:50,375 --> 00:02:52,125 for traveling the open oceans... 54 00:02:53,125 --> 00:02:55,875 ...but also up rivers and far inland. 55 00:02:56,042 --> 00:02:58,167 Nobody was really expecting these guys. 56 00:02:58,250 --> 00:03:00,833 People were unprotected. Cities were unprotected. 57 00:03:01,000 --> 00:03:04,042 Monasteries with vast amounts of gold were unprotected. 58 00:03:04,167 --> 00:03:07,167 And so when these raids started happening, 59 00:03:07,333 --> 00:03:09,417 everyone was caught by surprise. 60 00:03:09,542 --> 00:03:11,833 The Vikings completely upset the balance of power 61 00:03:12,000 --> 00:03:13,167 throughout Europe. 62 00:03:13,375 --> 00:03:15,000 NARRATOR: But despite their reputation 63 00:03:15,208 --> 00:03:16,583 as fierce conquerors, 64 00:03:16,750 --> 00:03:20,000 the Vikings were also skilled merchants, 65 00:03:20,208 --> 00:03:21,667 and they set up trade routes 66 00:03:21,833 --> 00:03:24,417 that reached every corner of the map. 67 00:03:24,542 --> 00:03:28,167 MELLOR: The Vikings were going both east and west, 68 00:03:28,375 --> 00:03:30,417 into France and down into Spain 69 00:03:30,583 --> 00:03:32,500 and the Mediterranean from that direction... 70 00:03:33,542 --> 00:03:36,250 ...and then east into what would become Russia 71 00:03:36,375 --> 00:03:39,500 and down into places like Constantinople. 72 00:03:40,542 --> 00:03:43,333 The long-term effects of the Viking Age are manifold. 73 00:03:43,458 --> 00:03:46,333 There are huge linguistic influences 74 00:03:46,542 --> 00:03:48,292 on languages like English and French. 75 00:03:48,458 --> 00:03:52,000 There's a massive political influence in Eastern Europe, 76 00:03:52,208 --> 00:03:54,042 where, for example, Russia draws its name 77 00:03:54,208 --> 00:03:56,667 from the name of a tribe of Swedish Vikings 78 00:03:56,833 --> 00:04:00,000 who invaded that part of Eastern Europe. 79 00:04:01,042 --> 00:04:05,375 We have the Byzantine emperor guarded by Viking bodyguards. 80 00:04:05,542 --> 00:04:09,792 We have Vikings in Baghdad trading with Arab traders. 81 00:04:09,917 --> 00:04:12,333 We have Vikings in the New World 82 00:04:12,500 --> 00:04:15,250 exploring at least as far as present-day Canada. 83 00:04:15,417 --> 00:04:17,958 They reached all over the world. 84 00:04:19,042 --> 00:04:22,833 NARRATOR: The Age of the Vikings lasted just 300 years, 85 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:26,917 from the middle of the 8th century until the 11th century. 86 00:04:27,042 --> 00:04:29,500 But despite their accomplishments, 87 00:04:29,708 --> 00:04:33,000 much about the Norse remains shrouded in mystery. 88 00:04:33,167 --> 00:04:35,750 Unlike other cultures at the time, 89 00:04:35,875 --> 00:04:38,042 they did not keep detailed written records 90 00:04:38,208 --> 00:04:39,667 of their history. 91 00:04:39,875 --> 00:04:43,667 Instead, they wrote brief inscriptions with runes. 92 00:04:43,875 --> 00:04:44,500 THOMPSON: Runes are 93 00:04:44,708 --> 00:04:46,500 an early form of Viking writing. 94 00:04:46,625 --> 00:04:49,792 They have been employed largely in carving in stone, 95 00:04:49,958 --> 00:04:53,250 so we see a lot of runestones. 96 00:04:53,417 --> 00:04:55,625 But runes were kind of cumbersome to write with, 97 00:04:55,833 --> 00:04:58,292 and so things tended to be short. 98 00:04:58,458 --> 00:05:00,792 It's not like the written literature that we get later. 99 00:05:02,083 --> 00:05:04,792 NARRATOR: Much about Norse history remained unknown 100 00:05:04,917 --> 00:05:08,958 until roughly 300 years after the Viking era. 101 00:05:10,083 --> 00:05:12,500 We would know very, very little if it weren't for two books 102 00:05:12,625 --> 00:05:14,750 from 1200s Iceland called Edda. 103 00:05:14,875 --> 00:05:18,000 The first book was written by an Icelandic chief 104 00:05:18,208 --> 00:05:20,708 named Snorri Sturluson. 105 00:05:20,875 --> 00:05:23,208 And in the 1220s or so, 106 00:05:23,375 --> 00:05:24,750 he wrote the Prose Edda 107 00:05:24,917 --> 00:05:29,208 to protect the heritage and the old stories. 108 00:05:29,375 --> 00:05:31,000 Also in the 1200s in Iceland, 109 00:05:31,208 --> 00:05:33,125 someone-- we don't know who-- 110 00:05:33,250 --> 00:05:35,333 wrote a book that we call the Poetic Edda. 111 00:05:35,500 --> 00:05:38,667 And this is just 30 or so of those poems 112 00:05:38,875 --> 00:05:41,167 about the pre-Christian gods and the, uh, 113 00:05:41,375 --> 00:05:43,250 pre-Christian Norse heroes 114 00:05:43,417 --> 00:05:46,000 written down by someone who wants to preserve them, 115 00:05:46,167 --> 00:05:49,000 because many of these seem to have been orally preserved 116 00:05:49,167 --> 00:05:50,792 for centuries. 117 00:05:51,875 --> 00:05:54,125 NARRATOR: The Eddas have provided historians 118 00:05:54,250 --> 00:05:57,083 with detailed accounts of Viking conquests, 119 00:05:57,208 --> 00:05:59,333 the lineages of kings, 120 00:05:59,542 --> 00:06:02,542 and even religious practices. 121 00:06:03,542 --> 00:06:05,417 They also introduced the world 122 00:06:05,583 --> 00:06:08,458 to the Norse people's rich mythological traditions, 123 00:06:08,583 --> 00:06:11,000 featuring dwarves, 124 00:06:11,167 --> 00:06:13,500 giants, elves, 125 00:06:13,625 --> 00:06:17,000 and all sorts of fantastical beasts. 126 00:06:18,042 --> 00:06:22,833 But Norse mythology is dominated by the gods known as the Aesir, 127 00:06:23,000 --> 00:06:26,375 who hold domain over certain aspects of existence. 128 00:06:26,542 --> 00:06:31,583 The leader of this pantheon is a one-eyed god named Odin. 129 00:06:31,750 --> 00:06:34,083 SEIGFRIED: Odin is complex. 130 00:06:34,250 --> 00:06:36,125 He's the god of war and death 131 00:06:36,292 --> 00:06:38,167 but also of poetry and memory. 132 00:06:38,333 --> 00:06:40,125 He inspires both the frenzy of battle 133 00:06:40,292 --> 00:06:41,583 and the frenzy of creativity. 134 00:06:41,708 --> 00:06:44,833 MELLOR: One of the most fun gods is Loki. 135 00:06:45,000 --> 00:06:47,292 Some people think of him as a trickster god, 136 00:06:47,458 --> 00:06:51,000 and he's oftentimes trying to deceive people. 137 00:06:51,208 --> 00:06:55,000 And deception is a very important component of warfare. 138 00:06:56,042 --> 00:06:59,375 PAMELA JAYE SMITH: Freyr was the Norse god of fertility. 139 00:07:00,292 --> 00:07:02,208 And his sister Freya, by the way, 140 00:07:02,375 --> 00:07:03,833 was the love goddess. 141 00:07:04,042 --> 00:07:05,958 THOMPSON: Thor is one of the main deities 142 00:07:06,125 --> 00:07:07,417 we see in Norse mythology. 143 00:07:07,583 --> 00:07:10,125 He's the god of thunder, the god of lightning. 144 00:07:10,208 --> 00:07:11,667 One of his most elemental symbols 145 00:07:11,875 --> 00:07:14,083 that we see again and again is his hammer. 146 00:07:15,125 --> 00:07:19,000 Thor's hammer seemed to have been used as a protector symbol. 147 00:07:19,125 --> 00:07:21,250 People would wear it around very often around their neck 148 00:07:21,458 --> 00:07:23,333 on a necklace for protection. 149 00:07:23,542 --> 00:07:26,667 NARRATOR: While today the Norse gods are regarded 150 00:07:26,750 --> 00:07:30,833 as simply characters in ancient mythological tales, 151 00:07:31,000 --> 00:07:32,167 to the Vikings, 152 00:07:32,333 --> 00:07:34,042 they were very real. 153 00:07:35,667 --> 00:07:38,000 The Norse gods were not apart from the world-- 154 00:07:38,208 --> 00:07:40,125 they were a part of the world. 155 00:07:41,167 --> 00:07:43,125 They were not simply praised on Sunday mornings. 156 00:07:43,208 --> 00:07:46,667 They were approached in ongoing reciprocal relationships 157 00:07:46,875 --> 00:07:48,958 maintained through sacrificial rituals. 158 00:07:49,958 --> 00:07:52,583 You give the gods something for them to give you something. 159 00:07:52,750 --> 00:07:54,333 So you sacrifice an animal, 160 00:07:54,542 --> 00:07:57,458 hoping that the god that you're sacrificing it to 161 00:07:57,667 --> 00:07:59,708 will receive your gift and say, "Ah, I favor him. 162 00:07:59,875 --> 00:08:02,042 I want to give him something." 163 00:08:13,833 --> 00:08:15,792 SEIGFRIED: The Viking offered to Thor 164 00:08:15,958 --> 00:08:18,208 and asked for fair weather for his travels. 165 00:08:18,375 --> 00:08:20,583 You don't sacrifice horses, weapons, 166 00:08:20,708 --> 00:08:22,708 and treasure you've won in battle unless you believe 167 00:08:22,917 --> 00:08:24,625 there are deities receiving these sacrifices. 168 00:08:24,833 --> 00:08:26,500 You don't raise altars to goddesses 169 00:08:26,667 --> 00:08:28,833 across the width of the world you travel 170 00:08:28,958 --> 00:08:31,125 unless you believe in building a reciprocal relationship 171 00:08:31,208 --> 00:08:32,958 with those goddesses. 172 00:08:33,083 --> 00:08:35,292 This is clearly backed by archaeological finds, 173 00:08:35,458 --> 00:08:38,083 sacrificial sites, burial sites, and so on. 174 00:08:39,042 --> 00:08:41,292 MELLOR: The Scandinavians undoubtedly thought 175 00:08:41,500 --> 00:08:43,042 that the gods would have been real. 176 00:08:43,208 --> 00:08:45,667 They would not have necessarily thought of them as metaphor. 177 00:08:46,708 --> 00:08:48,958 NARRATOR: While mainstream scholars suggest 178 00:08:49,083 --> 00:08:53,083 the Scandinavians' strong belief in the existence of their gods 179 00:08:53,292 --> 00:08:55,167 was simply a matter of faith, 180 00:08:55,333 --> 00:08:57,792 ancient astronaut theorists ask 181 00:08:57,917 --> 00:09:01,917 if these powerful beings might have truly existed. 182 00:09:02,042 --> 00:09:05,125 And if so, could they have assisted the Vikings 183 00:09:05,292 --> 00:09:09,125 in becoming one of the world's most sophisticated explorers 184 00:09:09,250 --> 00:09:10,625 and warriors? 185 00:09:12,458 --> 00:09:16,250 Perhaps further clues can be found by examining descriptions 186 00:09:16,417 --> 00:09:20,167 of the Norse gods' incredible technology. 187 00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:27,792 NARRATOR: Most of what is known about Norse mythology 188 00:09:27,917 --> 00:09:32,208 comes from the 13th century texts called the Eddas. 189 00:09:32,417 --> 00:09:33,625 But they recount a history 190 00:09:33,708 --> 00:09:36,667 that begins many centuries earlier. 191 00:09:37,708 --> 00:09:39,125 And according to the Eddas, 192 00:09:39,292 --> 00:09:42,708 the first ruler of the area now known as Denmark 193 00:09:42,875 --> 00:09:46,208 was a son of the god Odin named Skjöldr. 194 00:09:47,458 --> 00:09:49,583 For ancient astronaut theorists, 195 00:09:49,708 --> 00:09:53,458 this is particularly intriguing because it lines up 196 00:09:53,625 --> 00:09:56,333 with numerous other traditions around the world. 197 00:09:57,333 --> 00:10:01,167 This is almost identical to what we find in ancient Egypt. 198 00:10:01,333 --> 00:10:03,542 You have this golden age 199 00:10:03,708 --> 00:10:05,792 in which the gods walked on the earth, 200 00:10:05,875 --> 00:10:07,333 which the gods ruled. 201 00:10:07,542 --> 00:10:08,458 And then, ultimately, 202 00:10:08,625 --> 00:10:09,833 in Egypt, the pharaoh becomes 203 00:10:10,000 --> 00:10:12,708 the representative of the gods themselves, 204 00:10:12,875 --> 00:10:15,750 just as Emperor Jimmu became the representative 205 00:10:15,875 --> 00:10:18,583 of Amaterasu in Japan 206 00:10:18,708 --> 00:10:20,792 and also Huangdi, 207 00:10:20,958 --> 00:10:24,292 the legendary first emperor of China, the Yellow Emperor, 208 00:10:24,417 --> 00:10:27,333 who was said to sail into the stars and back to Earth. 209 00:10:27,500 --> 00:10:30,417 What's fascinating is that this idea occurs 210 00:10:30,542 --> 00:10:32,500 in ancient cultures around the world. 211 00:10:33,542 --> 00:10:36,125 NARRATOR: Another similarity that Norse mythology shares 212 00:10:36,250 --> 00:10:39,542 with other traditions across the planet 213 00:10:39,750 --> 00:10:44,083 is the idea that the gods come from another world. 214 00:10:44,208 --> 00:10:47,292 HENRY: In Norse mythology, the universe is divided into nine worlds. 215 00:10:47,458 --> 00:10:49,042 It's the realm of the gods, 216 00:10:49,208 --> 00:10:51,292 the realm of men, the realm of the giants, 217 00:10:51,500 --> 00:10:53,375 the dwarves, the elves, and so forth. 218 00:10:54,417 --> 00:10:57,500 NARRATOR: The Norse gods inhabited the realm of Asgard 219 00:10:57,667 --> 00:11:00,667 and came to Earth, known as Midgard, 220 00:11:00,750 --> 00:11:04,542 traveling across a rainbow bridge called Bifrost. 221 00:11:04,708 --> 00:11:06,583 But descriptions of Bifrost 222 00:11:06,750 --> 00:11:09,167 do not portray any kind of structure 223 00:11:09,375 --> 00:11:11,292 like a traditional bridge. 224 00:11:12,542 --> 00:11:14,625 "Bifrost" means "shimmering road," 225 00:11:14,750 --> 00:11:17,000 and the Edda tells us that it's the rainbow 226 00:11:17,167 --> 00:11:19,875 raised by the gods to connect the heavens and the earth. 227 00:11:20,042 --> 00:11:22,875 CRAWFORD: Bifrost is a burning bridge. 228 00:11:23,042 --> 00:11:25,667 The red that is the top layer of the rainbow's color 229 00:11:25,833 --> 00:11:27,833 is supposed to be the fire. 230 00:11:28,000 --> 00:11:31,417 I'm only aware of stories in which supernatural beings 231 00:11:31,583 --> 00:11:33,167 cross Bifrost. 232 00:11:33,375 --> 00:11:35,208 And some of them can't. 233 00:11:35,375 --> 00:11:39,042 The fire somehow burns them but doesn't seem to burn the gods. 234 00:11:40,667 --> 00:11:44,833 NARRATOR: Bifrost is also known as "the trembling or quivering way," 235 00:11:45,000 --> 00:11:48,167 suggesting that it is constantly moving. 236 00:11:48,375 --> 00:11:52,000 As far as ancient astronaut theorists are concerned, 237 00:11:52,167 --> 00:11:54,667 it's possible that the old Norse stories 238 00:11:54,875 --> 00:11:57,167 were attempting to describe a wormhole 239 00:11:57,292 --> 00:12:00,792 connecting Earth to a distant planet. 240 00:12:01,875 --> 00:12:06,000 A wormhole is a shortcut across the universe. 241 00:12:07,000 --> 00:12:10,042 And it's actually a structure predicted 242 00:12:10,208 --> 00:12:12,667 by the theory of general relativity. 243 00:12:12,792 --> 00:12:14,708 So there's science behind it. 244 00:12:16,042 --> 00:12:19,667 TSOUKALOS: The Scandinavians wrote that through Bifrost 245 00:12:19,792 --> 00:12:23,292 these celestial beings descended from the sky. 246 00:12:23,458 --> 00:12:26,042 In the ancient astronaut opinion, 247 00:12:26,250 --> 00:12:30,792 it almost seems like some type of a portal technology, 248 00:12:31,000 --> 00:12:33,750 because it was instantaneous travel 249 00:12:33,958 --> 00:12:36,500 to the so-called realm of the gods. 250 00:12:36,708 --> 00:12:42,167 NARRATOR: Could it be that the Norse gods were in fact extraterrestrials 251 00:12:42,333 --> 00:12:46,250 that traveled to Earth through some kind of space-time portal? 252 00:12:47,250 --> 00:12:51,000 Ancient astronaut theorists suggest further evidence 253 00:12:51,167 --> 00:12:54,208 to support this incredible notion can be found 254 00:12:54,417 --> 00:12:56,875 by examining elements from the Norse stories 255 00:12:57,042 --> 00:13:00,500 that sound like descriptions of high technology. 256 00:13:01,708 --> 00:13:02,917 TSOUKALOS: Norse mythology 257 00:13:03,083 --> 00:13:05,542 is filled with a concept that I refer to 258 00:13:05,667 --> 00:13:07,875 as misunderstood technology. 259 00:13:08,042 --> 00:13:11,792 In Norse mythology, we have stories of Odin, 260 00:13:11,958 --> 00:13:13,792 the highest god, for example, 261 00:13:14,000 --> 00:13:17,208 with his eight-legged horse Sleipnir 262 00:13:17,375 --> 00:13:21,667 that was a celestial horse that flew across the sky, 263 00:13:21,875 --> 00:13:25,000 leaving behind a trail of fire. 264 00:13:25,167 --> 00:13:29,292 We all know that horses do not have eight legs. 265 00:13:29,458 --> 00:13:33,333 And we also know that horses do not fly across the sky, 266 00:13:33,542 --> 00:13:35,667 leaving behind a fiery trail. 267 00:13:35,875 --> 00:13:39,000 So why do we have these stories? 268 00:13:40,042 --> 00:13:44,625 The pantheon of gods were advanced space travelers 269 00:13:44,750 --> 00:13:46,458 that our ancestors witnessed and thought, 270 00:13:46,625 --> 00:13:48,250 "Wow, they have to be gods 271 00:13:48,417 --> 00:13:51,333 because they just descended from the sky." 272 00:13:51,792 --> 00:13:56,167 NARRATOR: Odin, the god of the dead and the god of warfare, 273 00:13:56,333 --> 00:13:59,625 interacted often with humans in the Norse stories. 274 00:13:59,792 --> 00:14:01,958 It is also written that, 275 00:14:02,125 --> 00:14:05,000 from his magical throne called Hlidskjalf, 276 00:14:05,167 --> 00:14:07,958 he could observe all nine realms. 277 00:14:09,000 --> 00:14:12,583 MELLOR: Hlidskjalf sits at the top of this great tree 278 00:14:12,708 --> 00:14:14,208 called Yggdrasil, 279 00:14:14,375 --> 00:14:17,708 and Odin can look down on all of creation 280 00:14:17,875 --> 00:14:19,458 and see what's happening. 281 00:14:20,625 --> 00:14:21,500 HENRY: He could see everything. 282 00:14:21,708 --> 00:14:23,833 He could hear everything as well. 283 00:14:24,042 --> 00:14:27,000 It makes you wonder if this magic watchtower 284 00:14:27,208 --> 00:14:29,833 is an advanced alien technology. 285 00:14:30,875 --> 00:14:34,750 NARRATOR: Another prominent figure in Norse mythology was Freyr, 286 00:14:34,875 --> 00:14:37,250 the god of fertility. 287 00:14:37,375 --> 00:14:39,917 Freyr possessed the most incredible ship 288 00:14:40,083 --> 00:14:42,125 in all of the nine realms. 289 00:14:43,042 --> 00:14:45,375 Freyr had an interesting device. 290 00:14:46,542 --> 00:14:48,333 It was a ship. 291 00:14:48,500 --> 00:14:51,042 And this ship was so big 292 00:14:51,167 --> 00:14:53,875 that you could put all of the Norse deities in it 293 00:14:54,042 --> 00:14:56,125 and all their weapons 294 00:14:56,292 --> 00:14:59,625 and then you could fold it up, 295 00:14:59,792 --> 00:15:01,833 sort of like origami. 296 00:15:02,000 --> 00:15:04,542 And Freyr could put it in his pocket. 297 00:15:05,958 --> 00:15:08,000 HENRY: To us, when we hear a story like this, 298 00:15:08,208 --> 00:15:09,875 it automatically conjures images 299 00:15:10,042 --> 00:15:12,167 of advanced nanotechnology 300 00:15:12,333 --> 00:15:14,500 or perhaps a material science 301 00:15:14,583 --> 00:15:18,042 where they had an ability to create a lightweight material 302 00:15:18,208 --> 00:15:21,458 that could be folded into smaller dimensions 303 00:15:21,625 --> 00:15:25,167 and then could be unfolded into a much larger dimension. 304 00:15:26,500 --> 00:15:28,500 NARRATOR: Ancient astronaut theorists suggest 305 00:15:28,708 --> 00:15:31,833 that descriptions of the weapons wielded by the gods 306 00:15:32,000 --> 00:15:35,208 also sound like advanced technology. 307 00:15:36,417 --> 00:15:39,417 HENRY: Odin has Gungnir, the spear of heaven, 308 00:15:39,583 --> 00:15:42,750 that is also, uh, exemplary of what we would think of 309 00:15:42,917 --> 00:15:44,250 as modern technology today. 310 00:15:45,292 --> 00:15:47,833 When he would throw this spear, it would automatically hit 311 00:15:48,000 --> 00:15:50,042 whatever target he threw it at. 312 00:15:51,125 --> 00:15:53,000 And when we think about that today, 313 00:15:53,208 --> 00:15:56,292 it sounds identical to some kind of, like, heat-seeking missile 314 00:15:56,417 --> 00:15:59,125 or some guided precision weapon... 315 00:16:00,208 --> 00:16:02,750 ...that has these incredible capabilities. 316 00:16:03,792 --> 00:16:07,125 CRAWFORD: Thor's hammer Mjolnir has a variety of special powers. 317 00:16:08,167 --> 00:16:11,458 It can be thrown and will always come back to Thor. 318 00:16:12,208 --> 00:16:15,958 He can shrink it down to the size of an ordinary amulet 319 00:16:16,083 --> 00:16:17,500 so he can wear it around his neck. 320 00:16:17,667 --> 00:16:20,958 And, uh, it can also break anything that it hits. 321 00:16:22,458 --> 00:16:25,125 NARRATOR: Curiously, Thor could only use his hammer 322 00:16:25,292 --> 00:16:28,333 while wearing a special metal glove. 323 00:16:28,500 --> 00:16:30,000 MARTELL: It's really interesting to note 324 00:16:30,167 --> 00:16:32,792 that all these ancient stories around the Norse, 325 00:16:32,917 --> 00:16:34,833 these magical imbued objects, 326 00:16:35,000 --> 00:16:36,625 weapons and such, 327 00:16:36,792 --> 00:16:40,500 they're very similar to things that we can reference today. 328 00:16:41,500 --> 00:16:44,625 To me, it sounds like this is misunderstood technology. 329 00:16:44,792 --> 00:16:47,500 Ancient people were viewing things, 330 00:16:47,667 --> 00:16:48,875 and they didn't have a technological lens 331 00:16:49,042 --> 00:16:50,208 for reference. 332 00:16:51,417 --> 00:16:53,583 NARRATOR: Is it possible that the Norse gods 333 00:16:53,750 --> 00:16:55,833 were not fictional creations 334 00:16:56,000 --> 00:16:58,625 but were instead visitors from another planet? 335 00:17:00,792 --> 00:17:03,167 Ancient astronaut theorists say yes 336 00:17:03,375 --> 00:17:07,042 and suggest there may even be evidence that these beings 337 00:17:07,208 --> 00:17:10,667 had a hand in the success of the Vikings. 338 00:17:18,167 --> 00:17:21,000 NARRATOR: Here, in an ancient glacial valley, 339 00:17:21,208 --> 00:17:23,875 stands a 5,000-year-old megalithic structure 340 00:17:24,083 --> 00:17:25,667 known as the Dwarfie Stane. 341 00:17:27,125 --> 00:17:28,750 According to the locals, 342 00:17:28,917 --> 00:17:31,125 the Vikings who invaded this region 343 00:17:31,292 --> 00:17:35,125 claimed the inner chamber served as the home of a dwarf. 344 00:17:36,042 --> 00:17:37,250 For the Norse people, 345 00:17:37,417 --> 00:17:40,167 the dwarves were not fictional creations 346 00:17:40,333 --> 00:17:43,333 but real entities who inhabited a hidden realm 347 00:17:43,500 --> 00:17:44,667 beneath the earth. 348 00:17:45,792 --> 00:17:47,000 According to the Eddas, 349 00:17:47,208 --> 00:17:50,667 these diminutive beings were created by the gods 350 00:17:50,833 --> 00:17:53,417 to craft weapons and technology. 351 00:17:54,958 --> 00:17:56,333 CRAWFORD: The Old Norse term "dvergr," 352 00:17:56,500 --> 00:17:59,208 translated by its English cognate "dwarf," 353 00:17:59,375 --> 00:18:04,833 refers to a kind of supernatural being much lower than the gods 354 00:18:05,042 --> 00:18:07,667 that interacts both with them and with us. 355 00:18:09,042 --> 00:18:13,250 Their main function in the sagas is to make stuff, 356 00:18:13,375 --> 00:18:16,125 whether for the gods or for human beings. 357 00:18:16,292 --> 00:18:17,167 THOMPSON: The dwarves are an interesting figure 358 00:18:17,333 --> 00:18:19,125 in Norse mythology. 359 00:18:19,250 --> 00:18:21,583 They're not gods, uh, but they're not people. 360 00:18:21,750 --> 00:18:24,958 And they show up as being very powerful, very magical. 361 00:18:26,000 --> 00:18:29,000 And so the gods are constantly interacting with the dwarves. 362 00:18:29,167 --> 00:18:31,917 And a lot of the power of the Norse gods 363 00:18:32,083 --> 00:18:33,625 is derived from the dwarves. 364 00:18:34,625 --> 00:18:37,667 They're the ones that have an extraordinary ability 365 00:18:37,833 --> 00:18:39,333 to create things. 366 00:18:40,375 --> 00:18:44,792 Dwarves were described as being the best smiths. 367 00:18:45,750 --> 00:18:48,125 When the gods need to have things created, 368 00:18:48,292 --> 00:18:49,875 they go to the dwarves. 369 00:18:50,917 --> 00:18:54,583 These were the creators of these most important elements 370 00:18:54,750 --> 00:18:57,375 of the Norse Viking world. 371 00:18:59,000 --> 00:19:00,667 Things like Freyr's ship 372 00:19:00,875 --> 00:19:02,917 and Odin's spear 373 00:19:03,083 --> 00:19:05,125 and Thor's hammer. 374 00:19:08,042 --> 00:19:12,625 NARRATOR: The dwarves were also credited as being master sword makers. 375 00:19:12,792 --> 00:19:16,333 But the swords they forged were not just for the gods-- 376 00:19:16,500 --> 00:19:19,500 they were also made for humans. 377 00:19:19,708 --> 00:19:24,000 And they were said to possess extraordinary properties. 378 00:19:24,208 --> 00:19:25,083 CRAWFORD: The dwarves 379 00:19:25,250 --> 00:19:29,083 imbue their creations with magic 380 00:19:29,250 --> 00:19:32,333 and make stuff for human beings. 381 00:19:32,458 --> 00:19:34,458 For example, there's human heroes 382 00:19:34,625 --> 00:19:37,250 who have magical swords of different varieties. 383 00:19:37,375 --> 00:19:40,292 The most important story of the heroes 384 00:19:40,417 --> 00:19:43,125 is the story of Sigurd the dragonslayer. 385 00:19:43,292 --> 00:19:45,417 Sigurd has a magic sword. 386 00:19:47,167 --> 00:19:48,542 NARRATOR: According to the story, 387 00:19:48,708 --> 00:19:52,333 a dwarf forges Sigurd a sword so sharp 388 00:19:52,542 --> 00:19:56,708 it can cut through the impenetrable scales of a dragon. 389 00:19:57,750 --> 00:20:01,292 Other sagas describe weapons that were powerful enough 390 00:20:01,458 --> 00:20:03,417 to even kill the gods. 391 00:20:04,500 --> 00:20:06,500 There's the magic sword Tyrfing, 392 00:20:06,625 --> 00:20:12,167 which can only be drawn and put back into its scabbard 393 00:20:12,292 --> 00:20:15,417 if it draws blood in the meantime. 394 00:20:16,417 --> 00:20:17,417 So you can't put it back in its scabbard 395 00:20:17,583 --> 00:20:18,708 unless you've killed someone. 396 00:20:20,250 --> 00:20:23,625 NARRATOR: While tales of the dwarves being skilled weapons makers 397 00:20:23,833 --> 00:20:27,333 are considered by historians to be purely mythological... 398 00:20:28,375 --> 00:20:29,833 ...what can't be disputed 399 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:33,333 is that the Vikings possessed swords far superior 400 00:20:33,500 --> 00:20:36,750 to any others that were made during their time. 401 00:20:44,542 --> 00:20:47,417 While clearing his field of rocks, 402 00:20:47,583 --> 00:20:50,583 a farmer stumbles upon a remarkably well-preserved 403 00:20:50,708 --> 00:20:53,833 Viking sword half buried in the soil. 404 00:20:54,833 --> 00:20:56,833 The weapon is given to archaeologists 405 00:20:57,042 --> 00:21:00,375 who determine it is more than a thousand years old 406 00:21:00,542 --> 00:21:02,417 and discover that the blade 407 00:21:02,583 --> 00:21:05,917 contains a mysterious inscription. 408 00:21:07,125 --> 00:21:08,708 X-ray imaging reveals 409 00:21:08,875 --> 00:21:12,875 that the sword is inscribed with the name Ulfberht. 410 00:21:13,000 --> 00:21:17,000 RIC FURRER: The Ulfberht swords were made between about 800 411 00:21:17,167 --> 00:21:18,750 and 1000 AD. 412 00:21:18,875 --> 00:21:22,500 So, right solid in the high Viking period, 413 00:21:22,625 --> 00:21:25,375 when they were trading and raiding. 414 00:21:27,542 --> 00:21:29,167 NARRATOR: The recently unearthed weapon 415 00:21:29,333 --> 00:21:32,375 is one of approximately 170 swords 416 00:21:32,542 --> 00:21:35,417 that bear the mark "Ulfberht." 417 00:21:35,542 --> 00:21:37,583 But just how these blades were created 418 00:21:37,750 --> 00:21:40,417 continues to mystify researchers. 419 00:21:41,417 --> 00:21:44,417 I've analyzed 40 or 50 Ulfberht swords. 420 00:21:45,458 --> 00:21:49,417 And many of them still have a sharp edge. 421 00:21:49,583 --> 00:21:52,167 The chemistry's completely different 422 00:21:52,333 --> 00:21:56,542 to any other weapons found in medieval Europe. 423 00:21:56,708 --> 00:22:00,500 These Ulfberht swords were made of a very hard steel 424 00:22:00,708 --> 00:22:04,833 and would be vastly superior to any other weapon in combat. 425 00:22:06,125 --> 00:22:07,708 FURRER: The Ulfberhts were special 426 00:22:07,875 --> 00:22:10,958 because of the manufacturing techniques that went into them. 427 00:22:11,958 --> 00:22:14,667 Some of them were made from a crucible steel, 428 00:22:14,875 --> 00:22:17,500 which could have both flexible properties 429 00:22:17,667 --> 00:22:19,875 and edge hardness in a single item. 430 00:22:21,667 --> 00:22:23,375 NARRATOR: Perhaps most baffling 431 00:22:23,500 --> 00:22:26,000 is that, to create the Ulfberht swords, 432 00:22:26,167 --> 00:22:28,750 Norse blacksmiths would have had to heat their forges 433 00:22:28,917 --> 00:22:32,458 to over 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. 434 00:22:33,542 --> 00:22:36,042 But historians and archaeologists suggest 435 00:22:36,208 --> 00:22:38,583 that humans didn't develop the ability 436 00:22:38,750 --> 00:22:43,167 to achieve such an extreme heat until the Industrial Revolution, 437 00:22:43,333 --> 00:22:47,250 nearly 800 years after the Viking Age. 438 00:22:48,292 --> 00:22:52,125 So just who could have created these extraordinary weapons? 439 00:22:52,333 --> 00:22:54,042 Could it be that the Norse stories 440 00:22:54,250 --> 00:22:56,875 of dwarves forging incredible swords 441 00:22:57,042 --> 00:22:59,500 were not merely mythology? 442 00:23:00,542 --> 00:23:02,000 When you think about this, 443 00:23:02,167 --> 00:23:04,917 you-you have to at least be open to the possibility... 444 00:23:05,917 --> 00:23:08,333 ...that the swords of the Norse Vikings 445 00:23:08,500 --> 00:23:10,500 were created by these dwarves 446 00:23:10,667 --> 00:23:13,542 who were masters at this advanced technology. 447 00:23:13,750 --> 00:23:16,458 When you talk with people who live in Norway 448 00:23:16,625 --> 00:23:18,417 and Sweden and Iceland, 449 00:23:18,542 --> 00:23:20,792 over 60% of the people in a survey have claimed 450 00:23:20,875 --> 00:23:23,250 that they believe in these beings. 451 00:23:23,375 --> 00:23:25,125 FURRER: With the Ulfberht blades, 452 00:23:25,292 --> 00:23:27,000 we still don't know who made them. 453 00:23:27,208 --> 00:23:31,500 We don't know exact techniques of how they were made. 454 00:23:32,542 --> 00:23:35,333 Some were incredibly advanced in their techniques. 455 00:23:35,542 --> 00:23:36,875 Quite beautiful. 456 00:23:37,083 --> 00:23:39,167 Hard to produce even today in a modern shop. 457 00:23:40,208 --> 00:23:44,083 WILLIAMS: We don't know why the word "Ulfberht" was used. 458 00:23:44,250 --> 00:23:45,583 It was assumed, 459 00:23:45,750 --> 00:23:48,458 without any evidence, that it was a swordsmith's name. 460 00:23:48,625 --> 00:23:51,333 But it may have been simply the name of somebody 461 00:23:51,542 --> 00:23:53,958 whom the smith met or killed. 462 00:23:54,042 --> 00:23:57,208 They may have thought it was something sacred. 463 00:23:57,375 --> 00:23:59,208 We don't know. 464 00:23:59,375 --> 00:24:01,250 FURRER: What does "Ulfberht" mean? 465 00:24:01,375 --> 00:24:03,333 It's probably not a person. 466 00:24:03,542 --> 00:24:06,417 It was probably a word of power. 467 00:24:06,583 --> 00:24:08,667 "Ulf" means "wolf," 468 00:24:08,833 --> 00:24:12,000 and "berht" is an adjective meaning "bright." 469 00:24:12,208 --> 00:24:14,792 So it might be "bright wolf." 470 00:24:16,708 --> 00:24:21,292 Until we find some documented evidence of manufacture, 471 00:24:21,417 --> 00:24:24,417 we may never know the exact construction 472 00:24:24,542 --> 00:24:26,708 or the exact raw material that these were made from. 473 00:24:26,917 --> 00:24:32,125 And that adds to the mystery of these blades. 474 00:24:34,292 --> 00:24:37,375 NARRATOR: Is it possible that the dwarves of Norse mythology 475 00:24:37,542 --> 00:24:39,458 were real beings 476 00:24:39,667 --> 00:24:41,333 and that they helped the Vikings 477 00:24:41,500 --> 00:24:43,958 to craft their incredible swords? 478 00:24:44,917 --> 00:24:46,667 Perhaps further clues can be found 479 00:24:46,833 --> 00:24:49,208 by examining another technology 480 00:24:49,375 --> 00:24:53,625 that the Vikings were said to have received from the dwarves. 481 00:24:54,667 --> 00:24:56,958 A highly sophisticated navigation device 482 00:24:57,167 --> 00:25:00,083 that was long believed to be mythological 483 00:25:00,250 --> 00:25:05,167 until one was discovered at the bottom of the ocean. 484 00:25:10,750 --> 00:25:12,750 ♪ ♪ 485 00:25:15,042 --> 00:25:17,625 NARRATOR: Over a period of three months, 486 00:25:17,833 --> 00:25:21,333 Scandinavian archaeologists Gabriel Gustafson 487 00:25:21,458 --> 00:25:23,958 and Haakon Shetelig excavate 488 00:25:24,042 --> 00:25:27,167 a remarkably well-preserved Viking ship. 489 00:25:28,208 --> 00:25:31,167 Built from oak in the early ninth century AD, 490 00:25:31,375 --> 00:25:35,208 the vessel is an extraordinary piece of engineering. 491 00:25:36,208 --> 00:25:38,792 MELLOR: One of the things that the Vikings had 492 00:25:38,917 --> 00:25:42,000 was a ship that was a technological marvel 493 00:25:42,208 --> 00:25:43,250 for the time. 494 00:25:44,542 --> 00:25:46,542 They could go up and down rivers, 495 00:25:46,708 --> 00:25:49,458 they could go across oceans without flipping over 496 00:25:49,583 --> 00:25:51,792 as much as previous ships had done. 497 00:25:52,000 --> 00:25:54,958 And this meant that they had the ability 498 00:25:55,083 --> 00:25:56,750 to get into areas 499 00:25:56,917 --> 00:26:00,500 that other people at the time could not get into. 500 00:26:01,542 --> 00:26:04,167 THOMPSON: The Vikings' skill was really sort of unmatched 501 00:26:04,375 --> 00:26:05,875 by any other group at this time 502 00:26:06,042 --> 00:26:08,625 in terms of the craftsmanship of their boats. 503 00:26:08,792 --> 00:26:10,333 And these boats were very flexible, 504 00:26:10,542 --> 00:26:13,375 the way that they were made to flex with the waves, 505 00:26:13,542 --> 00:26:15,500 rather than break apart. 506 00:26:15,667 --> 00:26:17,125 So they often referred to them as the sea snakes, 507 00:26:17,333 --> 00:26:19,208 because they could sort of snake through the waves. 508 00:26:20,250 --> 00:26:22,667 NARRATOR: The unique design of Viking longships 509 00:26:22,833 --> 00:26:25,125 made it possible to sail at speeds 510 00:26:25,333 --> 00:26:27,667 approaching 28 miles per hour. 511 00:26:27,875 --> 00:26:32,917 No other vessels could travel as fast until 1852, 512 00:26:33,083 --> 00:26:36,667 more than 1,000 years after the first Viking ships 513 00:26:36,875 --> 00:26:38,875 took to the high seas. 514 00:26:39,875 --> 00:26:42,792 But what many researchers find even more impressive 515 00:26:42,958 --> 00:26:45,042 and more difficult to explain 516 00:26:45,167 --> 00:26:49,125 is the Vikings' incredible navigation skills. 517 00:26:51,500 --> 00:26:55,125 When talking about the Vikings, you're faced with a mystery, 518 00:26:55,333 --> 00:26:58,958 and the mystery is that how did the Vikings navigate? 519 00:26:59,958 --> 00:27:02,417 For all we know, they had no compass. 520 00:27:02,583 --> 00:27:04,042 The compass was a Chinese invention, 521 00:27:04,250 --> 00:27:07,708 and without a compass, how could they navigate? 522 00:27:07,875 --> 00:27:11,250 "Well, the stars," you say, but if you've ever been there, 523 00:27:11,417 --> 00:27:15,208 to the northern, uh, Atlantic, you realize how cloudy it is. 524 00:27:16,250 --> 00:27:20,375 On a cloudy day, there's no sun, there's no stars, 525 00:27:20,542 --> 00:27:24,542 and yet, they were able to navigate the North Seas 526 00:27:24,708 --> 00:27:27,167 with tremendous accuracy. 527 00:27:27,292 --> 00:27:29,333 And the question is 528 00:27:29,500 --> 00:27:31,042 how did they do it? 529 00:27:32,667 --> 00:27:36,125 NARRATOR: Ancient astronaut theorists believe clues might be found 530 00:27:36,292 --> 00:27:39,958 by taking a closer look at the Viking Sagas. 531 00:27:40,125 --> 00:27:43,833 According to legend, the dwarves provided humans 532 00:27:44,042 --> 00:27:46,333 with a special stone that enabled them 533 00:27:46,542 --> 00:27:49,000 to navigate with great accuracy. 534 00:27:49,958 --> 00:27:51,708 McMAHON: In the Norse Sagas, 535 00:27:51,875 --> 00:27:54,500 we get mention of something called the sólarsteinn, 536 00:27:54,708 --> 00:27:56,667 the sunstone, 537 00:27:56,833 --> 00:28:00,000 and this is a kind of translucent mineral 538 00:28:00,167 --> 00:28:05,583 that's oblong-shaped and had special magical powers. 539 00:28:05,792 --> 00:28:08,625 And it's something that the captain 540 00:28:08,792 --> 00:28:10,667 of a Viking warship 541 00:28:10,875 --> 00:28:14,000 would hold up to the cloudy sky, 542 00:28:14,167 --> 00:28:17,083 and through it, would be able to see where the Sun was, 543 00:28:17,250 --> 00:28:20,250 and that was essential to navigation. 544 00:28:21,292 --> 00:28:23,792 THOMPSON: These crystals were considered to be magic, 545 00:28:23,958 --> 00:28:26,125 and it's been long rumored that the sunstone 546 00:28:26,250 --> 00:28:28,958 may have been a major part of the navigational abilities, 547 00:28:29,083 --> 00:28:31,833 giving them an edge that other people at the time did not have. 548 00:28:32,875 --> 00:28:37,667 NARRATOR: Was the Viking sunstone simply a creation of Norse mythology? 549 00:28:37,833 --> 00:28:41,292 Or might it have really existed? 550 00:28:48,042 --> 00:28:49,958 Underwater archaeologists are exploring 551 00:28:50,125 --> 00:28:53,042 a 16th-century sunken English warship 552 00:28:53,208 --> 00:28:55,542 when they come upon an unusual crystal 553 00:28:55,708 --> 00:28:58,792 carved into a nearly perfect rectangle. 554 00:28:58,958 --> 00:29:01,958 Researchers are shocked when tests reveal 555 00:29:02,083 --> 00:29:04,625 that the object was carved from a chunk 556 00:29:04,792 --> 00:29:06,833 of Icelandic calcite, 557 00:29:07,042 --> 00:29:09,000 and they suspect they have found 558 00:29:09,208 --> 00:29:12,417 one of the fabled Viking sunstones. 559 00:29:13,417 --> 00:29:16,458 Calcite has a property that if light comes into it, 560 00:29:16,625 --> 00:29:19,167 it splits the light in half. 561 00:29:20,250 --> 00:29:22,958 On a cloudy day, if you look at a calcite crystal, 562 00:29:23,125 --> 00:29:25,167 you see not one image but two images, 563 00:29:25,333 --> 00:29:28,500 each one polarized slightly differently, 564 00:29:28,625 --> 00:29:31,000 and as you scan the sky, 565 00:29:31,167 --> 00:29:33,958 the intensity of these two changes, 566 00:29:34,083 --> 00:29:36,625 depending upon where the Sun is located. 567 00:29:36,792 --> 00:29:38,833 But when you lock on to the Sun, 568 00:29:39,000 --> 00:29:40,958 the two images are equally bright. 569 00:29:41,083 --> 00:29:45,000 Bingo, that's where the Sun is located. 570 00:29:45,167 --> 00:29:48,333 And that's how the Vikings could do it without a compass. 571 00:29:48,500 --> 00:29:50,292 They simply pointed it toward the Sun 572 00:29:50,458 --> 00:29:53,583 until the two images matched in intensity. 573 00:29:54,625 --> 00:29:57,167 NARRATOR: For archaeologists, almost as exciting 574 00:29:57,375 --> 00:29:59,625 as the discovery of a Viking sunstone 575 00:29:59,792 --> 00:30:04,500 was the fact that it was found on a 16th-century ship. 576 00:30:04,667 --> 00:30:07,833 McMAHON: What that shows us is that 500 years 577 00:30:08,000 --> 00:30:10,667 after the disappearance of the Vikings, 578 00:30:10,875 --> 00:30:13,875 their technology was still being used. 579 00:30:14,042 --> 00:30:17,292 This was still cutting-edge technology. 580 00:30:18,833 --> 00:30:21,750 NARRATOR: Might the sunstone provide physical evidence 581 00:30:21,917 --> 00:30:23,833 that the tales of Norse mythology 582 00:30:24,042 --> 00:30:25,875 are not entirely fiction, 583 00:30:26,042 --> 00:30:29,292 but could be based on real events? 584 00:30:30,333 --> 00:30:33,125 And if so, might otherworldly beings, 585 00:30:33,250 --> 00:30:36,833 like the dwarves and gods described in the Viking Sagas, 586 00:30:37,000 --> 00:30:38,333 have shared knowledge 587 00:30:38,500 --> 00:30:41,417 with the ancient people of Scandinavia? 588 00:30:42,458 --> 00:30:47,417 For ancient astronaut theorists, the answer is a resounding yes. 589 00:30:49,500 --> 00:30:52,167 Throughout Norse mythology, they really have an abundance 590 00:30:52,250 --> 00:30:55,417 of these magical, imbued objects, 591 00:30:55,583 --> 00:30:59,292 but if the Norse people had the ability to use a crystal 592 00:30:59,500 --> 00:31:01,583 as some type of astronomical beacon 593 00:31:01,708 --> 00:31:03,417 to actually know where the Sun was, 594 00:31:03,542 --> 00:31:06,500 this is some advanced science, and perhaps, 595 00:31:06,667 --> 00:31:09,083 someone taught the Norse people to understand 596 00:31:09,292 --> 00:31:11,875 the principles of using such a technology. 597 00:31:12,917 --> 00:31:16,667 NARRATOR: From the technological marvel known as the sunstone 598 00:31:16,792 --> 00:31:19,542 to the highly advanced Viking swords 599 00:31:19,708 --> 00:31:24,167 and mythology that reads like modern science fiction, 600 00:31:24,333 --> 00:31:26,500 ancient astronaut theorists suggest 601 00:31:26,667 --> 00:31:29,375 there is abundant evidence that the Norse people 602 00:31:29,542 --> 00:31:33,292 had encounters with otherworldly beings. 603 00:31:34,333 --> 00:31:36,292 But perhaps the most intriguing evidence of all 604 00:31:36,417 --> 00:31:39,292 can be found by closely examining 605 00:31:39,417 --> 00:31:43,208 the ritual of the Viking funeral. 606 00:31:48,208 --> 00:31:49,750 NARRATOR: Dinah Beach, Australia, 607 00:31:49,917 --> 00:31:53,583 July 12, 2025. 608 00:31:54,708 --> 00:31:56,000 At a modern-day yacht club 609 00:31:56,208 --> 00:31:58,667 more than 7,000 miles from Scandinavia, 610 00:31:58,833 --> 00:32:03,583 a ceremony is held to recreate one of the most important 611 00:32:03,750 --> 00:32:08,083 and iconic Norse rituals: the Viking funeral. 612 00:32:09,375 --> 00:32:12,333 In the days of the Vikings, the body of the deceased 613 00:32:12,500 --> 00:32:15,250 would be floated out to sea aboard a ship... 614 00:32:16,292 --> 00:32:18,542 ...then a flaming arrow launched to set it ablaze. 615 00:32:20,042 --> 00:32:24,083 TSOUKALOS: There's a whole symbology behind those rituals. 616 00:32:24,250 --> 00:32:27,000 And this is interesting because the whole idea 617 00:32:27,083 --> 00:32:29,042 of burning the dead 618 00:32:29,208 --> 00:32:32,792 is the smoke rises so that their essence 619 00:32:32,958 --> 00:32:36,083 could reach the realm of the gods. 620 00:32:36,292 --> 00:32:37,875 That is the legend behind it. 621 00:32:38,042 --> 00:32:40,042 But you have to ask yourself the question, 622 00:32:40,250 --> 00:32:41,583 what's the origin for that? 623 00:32:42,833 --> 00:32:44,750 What was the realm of the gods? 624 00:32:44,875 --> 00:32:48,917 Was it just a spiritual place, something ethereal? 625 00:32:49,917 --> 00:32:53,167 The ancient astronaut theory suggests, "Hold on a minute, 626 00:32:53,333 --> 00:32:57,500 maybe they actually meant a physical place." 627 00:32:58,542 --> 00:33:02,167 NARRATOR: The Viking funeral was symbolic of a journey to Asgard, 628 00:33:02,292 --> 00:33:04,833 the realm of the gods. 629 00:33:05,042 --> 00:33:07,167 But according to the old Norse stories, 630 00:33:07,333 --> 00:33:10,500 the actual journey happened on the battlefield, 631 00:33:10,708 --> 00:33:13,500 and it was carried out by the Valkyries, 632 00:33:13,667 --> 00:33:18,417 who are described as mortal women with divine powers. 633 00:33:18,583 --> 00:33:22,375 SMITH: In Norse mythology, you have Valkyries, 634 00:33:22,542 --> 00:33:26,500 who are warrior princesses who ride winged horses. 635 00:33:28,250 --> 00:33:30,458 And they fly over the battlefields, 636 00:33:30,625 --> 00:33:34,208 and they pick up the bravest of the warriors-- 637 00:33:34,375 --> 00:33:36,125 particularly as they're just about to die 638 00:33:36,292 --> 00:33:37,667 or if they have died-- 639 00:33:37,875 --> 00:33:42,333 and they carry up their spirits to Valhalla, 640 00:33:42,458 --> 00:33:45,792 which is the palace for fallen warriors and the feasting hall. 641 00:33:48,083 --> 00:33:51,708 McMAHON: The Vikings didn't fear death, because when they died, 642 00:33:51,875 --> 00:33:56,167 they went to Valhalla, and there, Odin would provide them 643 00:33:56,333 --> 00:33:57,917 with a banquet every night. 644 00:33:58,083 --> 00:34:00,250 They could eat and drink as much as they want. 645 00:34:02,375 --> 00:34:03,792 NARRATOR: In the Norse tales, 646 00:34:03,958 --> 00:34:07,875 Valhalla is portrayed as a great hall in Asgard 647 00:34:08,042 --> 00:34:10,167 where Odin, the ruler of the gods, 648 00:34:10,292 --> 00:34:12,542 welcomes fallen warriors. 649 00:34:13,542 --> 00:34:15,917 The hall is described as a physical place 650 00:34:16,042 --> 00:34:17,583 made of gleaming metal, 651 00:34:17,792 --> 00:34:21,792 held up by spear shafts and roofed by shields. 652 00:34:21,958 --> 00:34:25,667 And as far as ancient astronaut theorists are concerned, 653 00:34:25,833 --> 00:34:30,000 it's possible that Valhalla was not some mythical paradise, 654 00:34:30,083 --> 00:34:33,250 but something far more profound. 655 00:34:35,542 --> 00:34:39,833 TSOUKALOS: According to the ancient astronaut theory, 656 00:34:40,042 --> 00:34:43,208 "Valhalla" could be another name for, 657 00:34:43,417 --> 00:34:45,458 maybe, an orbiting space station or something like that. 658 00:34:45,625 --> 00:34:48,167 The reason why I'm saying this is 659 00:34:48,375 --> 00:34:52,000 because whenever we have a description of Valhalla, 660 00:34:52,167 --> 00:34:58,167 it is an incredible description of a place that has attributes 661 00:34:58,333 --> 00:35:01,583 that I refer to as misunderstood technology. 662 00:35:02,583 --> 00:35:05,083 Various descriptions of Valhalla give it the reference 663 00:35:05,208 --> 00:35:07,708 of being some type of a large metallic ship. 664 00:35:08,750 --> 00:35:10,792 Add to the fact that Valhalla is described as a place 665 00:35:10,958 --> 00:35:12,625 that they actually journeyed to, 666 00:35:12,750 --> 00:35:14,667 maybe this is some type of a description 667 00:35:14,833 --> 00:35:17,833 of them traveling to this in a ship, 668 00:35:18,042 --> 00:35:21,500 and since they put their dead in ships and set them afire, 669 00:35:21,708 --> 00:35:23,500 maybe this is actually a reference of them 670 00:35:23,708 --> 00:35:25,833 traveling to Valhalla in a ship that has flames 671 00:35:26,000 --> 00:35:28,000 coming out of it, 672 00:35:28,125 --> 00:35:30,542 going into space. 673 00:35:31,833 --> 00:35:35,333 NARRATOR: Could it be that the old Norse tales of Valhalla 674 00:35:35,542 --> 00:35:38,208 were describing some kind of craft or space station 675 00:35:38,375 --> 00:35:40,708 that was orbiting the Earth? 676 00:35:41,833 --> 00:35:45,375 And might the Viking funeral ceremony have been designed 677 00:35:45,542 --> 00:35:47,792 to mimic the fire and smoke 678 00:35:47,917 --> 00:35:51,792 produced by a rocket ship blasting off into space? 679 00:35:53,750 --> 00:35:57,625 Curiously, the Norse were not the only ancient culture 680 00:35:57,792 --> 00:36:00,792 to incorporate ships into their funerary rites. 681 00:36:02,292 --> 00:36:03,667 DAVID CHILDRESS: In Norse mythology, 682 00:36:03,750 --> 00:36:06,792 you have this concept of taking some kind of transport 683 00:36:06,917 --> 00:36:08,917 into the otherworld. 684 00:36:09,917 --> 00:36:12,167 This is something that has been around 685 00:36:12,375 --> 00:36:13,458 for thousands of years, 686 00:36:13,625 --> 00:36:16,625 and appears around the world. 687 00:36:16,750 --> 00:36:19,208 It's in Africa, 688 00:36:19,375 --> 00:36:22,042 it's in South America, 689 00:36:22,208 --> 00:36:24,542 it's in China. 690 00:36:24,708 --> 00:36:27,667 With Egyptian funeral rites, oftentimes there would be 691 00:36:27,833 --> 00:36:31,292 a funeral boat, was associated with it. 692 00:36:31,458 --> 00:36:33,000 And these boats themselves 693 00:36:33,083 --> 00:36:36,292 would be analogies of the spaceships, in fact, 694 00:36:36,458 --> 00:36:39,667 that would take them over the sky. 695 00:36:39,875 --> 00:36:41,583 TSOUKALOS: The fact that, around the world, 696 00:36:41,750 --> 00:36:44,417 you find the exact same references 697 00:36:44,583 --> 00:36:46,417 in ancient myths and legends, 698 00:36:46,583 --> 00:36:48,708 to me, is not a coincidence, 699 00:36:48,875 --> 00:36:52,500 but on the contrary, it relays that true origin 700 00:36:52,583 --> 00:36:55,625 was a worldwide visitation 701 00:36:55,792 --> 00:36:58,708 by visiting extraterrestrials. 702 00:36:59,958 --> 00:37:02,500 NARRATOR: Is it possible that modern reenactments 703 00:37:02,667 --> 00:37:05,500 of the Viking funeral unknowingly commemorate 704 00:37:05,667 --> 00:37:09,458 otherworldly contact in the distant past? 705 00:37:09,583 --> 00:37:12,833 As far as ancient astronaut theorists are concerned, 706 00:37:13,042 --> 00:37:15,875 the answer is a resounding yes. 707 00:37:17,125 --> 00:37:19,000 And they suggest there is evidence 708 00:37:19,125 --> 00:37:23,667 that Scandinavia may be experiencing alien activity 709 00:37:23,875 --> 00:37:25,875 even today. 710 00:37:35,458 --> 00:37:37,500 NARRATOR: Just before dawn, 711 00:37:37,583 --> 00:37:39,417 an incredible spiral of light 712 00:37:39,542 --> 00:37:42,458 appears in the night sky. 713 00:37:43,417 --> 00:37:45,625 It swirls in place for ten minutes 714 00:37:45,750 --> 00:37:49,833 and is witnessed hundreds of miles away in Sweden. 715 00:37:50,833 --> 00:37:53,208 NICK POPE: The Norwegian spiral anomaly 716 00:37:53,333 --> 00:37:55,583 captured the imagination of the world. 717 00:37:55,792 --> 00:37:59,083 Theories included that it was something to do 718 00:37:59,208 --> 00:38:01,000 with the northern lights, 719 00:38:01,167 --> 00:38:06,333 that it was the malfunctioning of a Russian ballistic missile. 720 00:38:06,542 --> 00:38:09,875 Other people had more exotic theories. 721 00:38:10,042 --> 00:38:12,333 RICHARD DOLAN: It looked just awe-inspiring. 722 00:38:12,458 --> 00:38:14,833 It really, truly did. 723 00:38:15,042 --> 00:38:16,417 So, naturally, there was a lot of questioning, 724 00:38:16,583 --> 00:38:17,958 wondering, like, what is it? 725 00:38:18,167 --> 00:38:20,833 Is this a UFO th-- related thing or is it not? 726 00:38:21,000 --> 00:38:25,042 POPE: Some people said this is the opening of a wormhole. 727 00:38:26,167 --> 00:38:27,542 Something's come through. 728 00:38:29,292 --> 00:38:31,083 NARRATOR: The Norwegian spiral anomaly 729 00:38:31,250 --> 00:38:33,500 made headlines around the world. 730 00:38:33,708 --> 00:38:35,750 And it was only the latest 731 00:38:35,917 --> 00:38:39,333 in a number of extraordinary mass UFO sightings 732 00:38:39,500 --> 00:38:43,167 that have occurred over the area of Scandinavia. 733 00:38:43,333 --> 00:38:45,167 Since the 1930s, 734 00:38:45,375 --> 00:38:49,292 residents of the small mountain village of Hessdalen, Norway, 735 00:38:49,500 --> 00:38:52,500 have been reporting strange lights of various colors 736 00:38:52,708 --> 00:38:54,500 that appear at night 737 00:38:54,667 --> 00:38:58,083 and sometimes even during the day. 738 00:39:15,875 --> 00:39:18,833 NARRATOR: The reports continued for decades. 739 00:39:19,958 --> 00:39:21,375 And in 1983, 740 00:39:21,542 --> 00:39:24,667 Norwegian electrical engineer Erling Strand 741 00:39:24,792 --> 00:39:28,458 started a research project to investigate the phenomena. 742 00:39:57,583 --> 00:39:59,792 NARRATOR: In addition to the Hessdalen Lights, 743 00:39:59,958 --> 00:40:06,000 in 1946, thousands of people in Sweden, Norway and Denmark 744 00:40:06,208 --> 00:40:09,583 witnessed what were referred to as the "ghost rockets," 745 00:40:09,750 --> 00:40:13,167 which are some of the earliest UFO sightings on record. 746 00:40:27,500 --> 00:40:28,750 NARRATOR: For ancient astronaut theorists, 747 00:40:28,958 --> 00:40:31,333 these sensational UFO events 748 00:40:31,500 --> 00:40:33,333 beg the question: 749 00:40:33,458 --> 00:40:35,833 is it possible that alien entities 750 00:40:36,042 --> 00:40:38,042 witnessed by the Vikings are still present 751 00:40:38,208 --> 00:40:41,083 in this region today? 752 00:40:41,208 --> 00:40:45,250 POPE: Scandinavia is undoubtedly a UFO hot spot. 753 00:40:45,417 --> 00:40:49,958 And we have interesting accounts from Norse folklore. 754 00:40:51,000 --> 00:40:53,125 And of course, there are many, many people who say 755 00:40:53,292 --> 00:40:56,500 that mythology is just the way that our ancestors 756 00:40:56,667 --> 00:40:59,958 described real things that happened to them, 757 00:41:00,125 --> 00:41:03,500 but just made them into these Sagas, 758 00:41:03,667 --> 00:41:05,333 as a way of keeping the story alive, 759 00:41:05,500 --> 00:41:07,833 and telling it to successive generations. 760 00:41:08,042 --> 00:41:11,667 CHILDRESS: You have to wonder if the Norwegian spiral anomaly 761 00:41:11,833 --> 00:41:14,917 has to do with these Nordic gods... 762 00:41:15,917 --> 00:41:18,625 ...and coming and going out of this place 763 00:41:18,833 --> 00:41:21,000 for many thousands of years. 764 00:41:21,125 --> 00:41:24,000 And it could be that these Norse gods, 765 00:41:24,125 --> 00:41:27,708 as extraterrestrials, are still here. 766 00:41:30,375 --> 00:41:33,167 NARRATOR: Could it be that otherworldly visitors 767 00:41:33,333 --> 00:41:35,833 encountered by the Norse people centuries ago 768 00:41:36,000 --> 00:41:38,375 are behind the many strange sightings 769 00:41:38,542 --> 00:41:41,708 reported over Scandinavia today? 770 00:41:41,875 --> 00:41:44,708 And do the ancient tales of these gods 771 00:41:44,875 --> 00:41:47,625 still resonate because they are part 772 00:41:47,792 --> 00:41:50,208 of humankind's true history? 773 00:41:50,375 --> 00:41:55,333 Perhaps one day soon, characters like Thor and Odin, 774 00:41:55,542 --> 00:41:58,083 long relegated to the realm of mythology, 775 00:41:58,250 --> 00:42:01,583 will introduce themselves to humanity once again 776 00:42:01,792 --> 00:42:05,500 as our alien ancestors. 777 00:42:05,667 --> 00:42:08,292 CAPTIONING PROVIDED BY A+E NETWORKS 62656

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