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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,040 --> 00:00:05,120 The Vikings. 2 00:00:05,120 --> 00:00:07,840 Blond, brawny and brutal. 3 00:00:07,840 --> 00:00:10,720 They plundered and pillaged across continents 4 00:00:10,720 --> 00:00:13,080 in the days before the Norman Conquest. 5 00:00:13,080 --> 00:00:17,160 - Whoa! That is a sword cut into someone's head. - A sword cut mark. 6 00:00:17,160 --> 00:00:20,840 Their longships wreaked havoc across the North Atlantic... 7 00:00:20,840 --> 00:00:23,320 but how far did these seafarers voyage? 8 00:00:25,200 --> 00:00:27,280 The Vikings are still a mystery. 9 00:00:29,960 --> 00:00:33,480 Now I want to shine a light into the Vikings' dark past. 10 00:00:35,560 --> 00:00:36,840 I'm joining forces 11 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:40,640 with world-renowned satellite archaeologist Dr Sarah Parcak. 12 00:00:42,720 --> 00:00:44,960 Together we'll search for the greatest prize 13 00:00:44,960 --> 00:00:47,440 in Viking archaeology. 14 00:00:47,440 --> 00:00:49,960 It screams, "Please excavate me!" 15 00:00:49,960 --> 00:00:52,240 SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 16 00:00:52,240 --> 00:00:55,040 The Vikings' own stories, the sagas, 17 00:00:55,040 --> 00:00:58,440 reveal they explored deep into North America 18 00:00:58,440 --> 00:01:00,880 some 500 years before Columbus. 19 00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:03,360 If this is a Viking site, you've just discovered 20 00:01:03,360 --> 00:01:05,600 the furthest known western point 21 00:01:05,600 --> 00:01:08,080 of the entire Viking expansion. 22 00:01:09,920 --> 00:01:11,480 We'll hunt for those lost Vikings 23 00:01:11,480 --> 00:01:13,560 and I'll discover how they voyaged further 24 00:01:13,560 --> 00:01:16,200 than any European had ever done before. 25 00:01:17,640 --> 00:01:21,240 Lovely! That reindeer droppings are really cutting through there. 26 00:01:21,240 --> 00:01:22,880 On this journey, I'll uncover 27 00:01:22,880 --> 00:01:25,480 just how closely related to the Vikings we are. 28 00:01:25,480 --> 00:01:29,160 I hate to admit, but we are probably the same species as the British. 29 00:01:29,160 --> 00:01:31,440 And they weren't just Hells Angels, 30 00:01:31,440 --> 00:01:33,360 they were shrewd entrepreneurs. 31 00:01:33,360 --> 00:01:34,840 Mesmerising, isn't it? 32 00:01:34,840 --> 00:01:37,520 We're setting out to prove that they were the first Europeans 33 00:01:37,520 --> 00:01:41,080 to settle in the New World 1,000 years ago. 34 00:01:41,080 --> 00:01:43,320 This is a very good day indeed! 35 00:01:43,320 --> 00:01:46,080 It would just be really good to have the dates work out. 36 00:01:46,080 --> 00:01:47,520 So, are you ready? 37 00:02:02,560 --> 00:02:05,040 Lerwick on the Shetland Islands. 38 00:02:07,400 --> 00:02:10,320 Every January, it hosts Up Helly Aa. 39 00:02:10,320 --> 00:02:13,800 One of the most colourful celebrations of our Viking past. 40 00:02:13,800 --> 00:02:15,600 RAUCOUS CHEERING 41 00:02:19,440 --> 00:02:21,880 You know what? When you see these big, tough men 42 00:02:21,880 --> 00:02:24,040 walking down the street in glittering armour, 43 00:02:24,040 --> 00:02:26,880 they do convey an amazing impression. 44 00:02:26,880 --> 00:02:31,120 - Three cheers for the Guizer Jarl. Hip, hip! - CROWD: - HOORAY! 45 00:02:31,120 --> 00:02:32,720 Scary! 46 00:02:32,720 --> 00:02:34,720 THEY CHEER 47 00:02:36,080 --> 00:02:40,000 The Vikings arrived here in their longships 1,200 years ago. 48 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:42,120 BAGPIPE MUSIC 49 00:02:43,240 --> 00:02:45,520 They famously plundered and pillaged, 50 00:02:45,520 --> 00:02:47,640 but they also settled much of Britain 51 00:02:47,640 --> 00:02:49,600 and explored the North Atlantic. 52 00:02:51,760 --> 00:02:54,640 They left powerful marks on our identity 53 00:02:54,640 --> 00:02:56,520 and our gene pool. 54 00:02:56,520 --> 00:02:58,800 We are more Viking here than Scottish. 55 00:02:58,800 --> 00:03:01,160 Aaagh! I know who I am. 56 00:03:02,280 --> 00:03:04,760 Yet much of what we know about them 57 00:03:04,760 --> 00:03:08,160 still comes from comic books rather than history books. 58 00:03:09,800 --> 00:03:13,720 No real Viking ever wore a winged or horned helmet. 59 00:03:17,080 --> 00:03:20,240 If even our most familiar image of the Vikings is wrong, 60 00:03:20,240 --> 00:03:22,520 what other myths are there left to explode? 61 00:03:30,480 --> 00:03:34,280 I'm heading to Copenhagen, the heart of the Viking homeland, 62 00:03:34,280 --> 00:03:38,320 to start my quest to discover how far beyond our Shetland friends 63 00:03:38,320 --> 00:03:40,720 Viking power extended. 64 00:03:43,400 --> 00:03:47,400 Waiting for me is an old Norse saga named after one of the Vikings' 65 00:03:47,400 --> 00:03:50,240 most heroic and notorious characters. 66 00:03:52,360 --> 00:03:55,040 So, this is the Saga of Erik the Red 67 00:03:55,040 --> 00:03:59,240 and this is the oldest surviving text that we have of this saga. 68 00:03:59,240 --> 00:04:02,600 Dr Emily Lethbridge is an expert on the sagas, 69 00:04:02,600 --> 00:04:06,160 the Vikings' own stories, written down by their descendants. 70 00:04:08,480 --> 00:04:11,480 So, this is 700 years old, this book? 71 00:04:11,480 --> 00:04:13,840 SHE SPEAKS OLD NORSE 72 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:24,040 This saga tells of a voyage by Erik the Red's son, Leif, 73 00:04:24,040 --> 00:04:26,760 to a place west of Greenland. 74 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:29,880 The sagas describe the discovery of this country 75 00:04:29,880 --> 00:04:34,640 and it's an incredibly lush place, absolutely teeming with wildlife. 76 00:04:35,800 --> 00:04:39,960 So that's how, according to this saga, North America was discovered. 77 00:04:39,960 --> 00:04:43,240 So, this is hundreds of years before Christopher Columbus, 78 00:04:43,240 --> 00:04:47,120 - here it is, in this manuscript, right here. - Yeah! 79 00:04:47,120 --> 00:04:49,200 And that's not all. 80 00:04:49,200 --> 00:04:53,400 The first people to explore this place they named Vinland 81 00:04:53,400 --> 00:04:55,320 may actually have been British. 82 00:04:55,320 --> 00:04:57,440 SAGA IS SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 83 00:04:57,440 --> 00:05:01,320 A couple of Scots are sent ashore to explore the land 84 00:05:01,320 --> 00:05:05,080 and they come back, one of them with a handful of self-sown wheat 85 00:05:05,080 --> 00:05:07,320 and the other with a vine in their hand. 86 00:05:07,320 --> 00:05:10,400 Wild vines. Is that where they get the name Vinland from? 87 00:05:10,400 --> 00:05:12,840 That's one interpretation, yes. 88 00:05:16,440 --> 00:05:19,680 So, where in North America could Vinland have been? 89 00:05:23,600 --> 00:05:26,200 In 1960, at a place called L'Anse aux Meadows 90 00:05:26,200 --> 00:05:29,280 on the northern tip of Newfoundland, 91 00:05:29,280 --> 00:05:33,240 archaeologists made the remarkable discovery of a Viking transit camp. 92 00:05:35,320 --> 00:05:38,920 It contained Viking hallmarks - their long houses 93 00:05:38,920 --> 00:05:40,720 and evidence of metalworking... 94 00:05:43,120 --> 00:05:45,720 ..but the sagas don't just talk about one camp. 95 00:05:45,720 --> 00:05:48,320 They describe other settlements elsewhere. 96 00:05:49,800 --> 00:05:52,360 So, what does it say about other stories in here? 97 00:05:52,360 --> 00:05:55,880 I mean, there must be a lot more to find out in North America. 98 00:05:55,880 --> 00:06:01,880 There could well be, because the sagas describe not only these guys 99 00:06:01,880 --> 00:06:04,960 stopping off in one place, but stopping off in a number of places 100 00:06:04,960 --> 00:06:07,000 and they were there for several years. 101 00:06:07,000 --> 00:06:09,320 They had a whole new world to explore. 102 00:06:09,320 --> 00:06:11,360 So, there may be some archaeology out there? 103 00:06:11,360 --> 00:06:13,680 There may be some archaeology out there. 104 00:06:24,400 --> 00:06:25,880 I'm hooked. 105 00:06:25,880 --> 00:06:30,000 Scots amongst the first Europeans in the New World - 106 00:06:30,000 --> 00:06:33,560 and then there's the promise of more sites in America. 107 00:06:37,040 --> 00:06:41,320 But how to follow in the footsteps of Erik the Red and his son Leif 108 00:06:41,320 --> 00:06:43,800 and find those lost Vikings? 109 00:06:46,600 --> 00:06:51,920 The answer might lie in an unlikely location - Birmingham, Alabama... 110 00:06:54,120 --> 00:06:58,240 ..in the lab of the world-renowned space archaeologist Dr Sarah Parcak. 111 00:06:59,880 --> 00:07:02,640 Sarah has pioneered the use of satellites 112 00:07:02,640 --> 00:07:05,640 to make ground-breaking archaeological discoveries... 113 00:07:05,640 --> 00:07:07,400 from space. 114 00:07:09,000 --> 00:07:13,400 She uses infrared imagery to show up the differences between desert sand 115 00:07:13,400 --> 00:07:16,400 and building material beneath the surface. 116 00:07:17,480 --> 00:07:20,520 And lo and behold - the map of a whole city. 117 00:07:24,440 --> 00:07:27,400 She's already uncovered lost pyramids in Egypt... 118 00:07:29,880 --> 00:07:33,000 ..and together we found the fabled lighthouse 119 00:07:33,000 --> 00:07:34,680 of Ancient Rome's harbour. 120 00:07:34,680 --> 00:07:36,920 That is awesome! 121 00:07:36,920 --> 00:07:39,880 Now, Sarah's joining me on the trail of the Vikings - 122 00:07:39,880 --> 00:07:43,240 but this is uncharted territory for her. 123 00:07:43,240 --> 00:07:46,720 After all, her speciality is Ancient Egypt. 124 00:07:48,120 --> 00:07:51,120 This project is my biggest challenge yet - 125 00:07:51,120 --> 00:07:55,440 I've been working in Egypt for the last 15 years - 126 00:07:55,440 --> 00:07:57,840 but then, thinking about the Vikings, 127 00:07:57,840 --> 00:08:01,720 you have a vast empire across a vast ocean. 128 00:08:01,720 --> 00:08:05,320 Also, the Vikings lived in farmsteads. 129 00:08:05,320 --> 00:08:07,320 It was much more ephemeral, you know - 130 00:08:07,320 --> 00:08:09,760 they simply didn't leave a lot behind. 131 00:08:11,080 --> 00:08:13,800 Sarah will have to adapt her methods. 132 00:08:13,800 --> 00:08:17,000 Unlike in Egypt, she'll be relying on subtle differences 133 00:08:17,000 --> 00:08:21,960 in surface vegetation that only hint at what may lie beneath. 134 00:08:21,960 --> 00:08:27,280 All from a camera 383 miles above the earth's surface. 135 00:08:32,320 --> 00:08:35,640 I can't wait to find out what Sarah's discovered. 136 00:08:35,640 --> 00:08:38,560 She's been searching all the places the Vikings went 137 00:08:38,560 --> 00:08:40,400 across the North Atlantic - 138 00:08:40,400 --> 00:08:43,640 Scotland, Iceland and Greenland... 139 00:08:45,200 --> 00:08:48,560 ..but the Holy Grail is North America. 140 00:08:50,280 --> 00:08:52,320 We've really been focusing our efforts 141 00:08:52,320 --> 00:08:54,120 on the eastern seaboard of Canada. 142 00:08:54,120 --> 00:08:56,880 If you find something on the eastern seaboard of Canada, 143 00:08:56,880 --> 00:08:58,320 that would be huge. 144 00:08:58,320 --> 00:09:01,000 So, let's go into Newfoundland. 145 00:09:01,000 --> 00:09:05,840 Right now, the only known Norse site in all of North America 146 00:09:05,840 --> 00:09:09,240 is at the northern tip of Newfoundland, at L'Anse aux Meadows. 147 00:09:09,240 --> 00:09:13,680 So, if you believe the sagas, that might just have been a transit camp. 148 00:09:13,680 --> 00:09:14,760 That's right. 149 00:09:14,760 --> 00:09:18,560 Would they have had something more permanent somewhere else? 150 00:09:18,560 --> 00:09:20,360 Where are these other places? 151 00:09:20,360 --> 00:09:24,520 Over the last couple of months, we've spent a lot of time 152 00:09:24,520 --> 00:09:27,920 looking along the entire Labrador coast. 153 00:09:27,920 --> 00:09:29,720 We looked up every single river. 154 00:09:29,720 --> 00:09:33,240 It's like looking for a needle in a million haystacks. 155 00:09:33,240 --> 00:09:36,320 Tens and tens of thousands of square kilometres. 156 00:09:36,320 --> 00:09:39,000 We've even looked along the coastline of Maine 157 00:09:39,000 --> 00:09:41,800 into Massachusetts. So, we've looked everywhere... 158 00:09:41,800 --> 00:09:43,200 Come on! Show me! 159 00:09:43,200 --> 00:09:47,040 ..and this very interesting site appeared in Newfoundland. 160 00:09:47,040 --> 00:09:49,480 So, when we were doing initial processing, 161 00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:51,880 all I saw was a dark stain. 162 00:09:53,320 --> 00:09:57,240 You can see this slightly darker area right here, that's all I saw... 163 00:09:57,240 --> 00:09:59,400 - OK. - ..and I almost discarded it. 164 00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:01,720 But when we processed that imagery... 165 00:10:05,920 --> 00:10:09,320 ..that rectilinear structure shows up very clearly here. 166 00:10:14,040 --> 00:10:18,440 You can see the outline of what looks like a long house better here, 167 00:10:18,440 --> 00:10:21,800 but you can see actual internal divisions. 168 00:10:22,960 --> 00:10:28,520 - It's 22 metres long and seven metres wide. - Mm. 169 00:10:28,520 --> 00:10:33,160 The exact same size as the long houses at L'Anse aux Meadows. 170 00:10:33,160 --> 00:10:34,720 No way! 171 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:39,280 This is the first site we've had in 55 years 172 00:10:39,280 --> 00:10:43,200 that merits closer examination and excavation. 173 00:10:43,200 --> 00:10:48,440 I mean - its size, its shape - it screams, "Please, excavate me!" 174 00:10:48,440 --> 00:10:51,120 If this is a Viking site, you've just discovered 175 00:10:51,120 --> 00:10:55,840 the furthest known western point of the entire Viking expansion. 176 00:10:58,080 --> 00:11:00,040 When you visit Sarah's lab for the day, 177 00:11:00,040 --> 00:11:03,400 it feels like you've got a front row seat at the making of history. 178 00:11:03,400 --> 00:11:05,280 We've seen the data on the big screen 179 00:11:05,280 --> 00:11:08,400 and now I can't wait to put my boots on and get out there on the ground. 180 00:11:11,760 --> 00:11:15,960 It's now down to Sarah and I to prove the Vikings put down roots 181 00:11:15,960 --> 00:11:19,280 even further west than anyone has ever thought. 182 00:11:21,960 --> 00:11:24,560 First of all, Sarah needs to convince the authorities 183 00:11:24,560 --> 00:11:26,440 to let her dig. 184 00:11:26,440 --> 00:11:30,800 So her team will carry out surveying work at the new site, 185 00:11:30,800 --> 00:11:33,720 while Sarah tests out her satellite technology 186 00:11:33,720 --> 00:11:36,160 by gathering evidence of the Viking route 187 00:11:36,160 --> 00:11:39,960 across the North Atlantic from Britain to North America. 188 00:11:42,080 --> 00:11:46,120 Meanwhile, I'm going to work out how they managed to travel so far west 189 00:11:46,120 --> 00:11:48,200 1,000 years ago. 190 00:11:48,200 --> 00:11:49,400 Now the hard work begins, 191 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:51,960 when we get this beast up the top of the mast. 192 00:11:51,960 --> 00:11:53,240 Fast. 193 00:11:54,480 --> 00:11:56,040 Free. 194 00:11:56,040 --> 00:11:57,480 Fast. 195 00:11:57,480 --> 00:11:58,680 Free. 196 00:11:58,680 --> 00:12:01,960 I'm getting a crash course in Viking sailing 197 00:12:01,960 --> 00:12:05,640 on an exact replica of an 11th century ship. 198 00:12:11,560 --> 00:12:14,520 There is one concession to modern convenience. 199 00:12:16,360 --> 00:12:17,640 That's pretty heavy work. 200 00:12:17,640 --> 00:12:20,720 - Yeah, you are just halfway, so... - Halfway. OK. - Yeah. 201 00:12:22,720 --> 00:12:24,600 It's getting heavier. 202 00:12:26,360 --> 00:12:30,040 The advent of the square sail at the start of the Viking era 203 00:12:30,040 --> 00:12:33,400 meant these people were no longer confined to the shoreline. 204 00:12:33,400 --> 00:12:36,320 They were now masters of the open oceans. 205 00:12:38,960 --> 00:12:40,160 I've sailed my whole life 206 00:12:40,160 --> 00:12:42,520 and I've even sailed through these waters before, 207 00:12:42,520 --> 00:12:44,280 but I've never been on a Viking ship - 208 00:12:44,280 --> 00:12:46,480 and this kind of ship is so iconic. 209 00:12:46,480 --> 00:12:48,880 This is where the whole history 210 00:12:48,880 --> 00:12:52,680 of European maritime exploration begins. 211 00:12:57,120 --> 00:12:59,560 It is absolutely beautiful. 212 00:13:08,560 --> 00:13:10,240 With a 15-strong crew, 213 00:13:10,240 --> 00:13:13,640 ships like this would carry 20 tonnes of cargo, 214 00:13:13,640 --> 00:13:16,880 including goats and cows, up to 2,000 miles. 215 00:13:18,840 --> 00:13:21,680 It's a lot more responsive than you'd think, looking at it. 216 00:13:21,680 --> 00:13:24,480 There's wind in the sail, it's responding to the tiller here, 217 00:13:24,480 --> 00:13:26,760 it's responding to the sea, it's great! 218 00:13:29,280 --> 00:13:32,200 And you realise it might be over 1,000-year-old technology, 219 00:13:32,200 --> 00:13:34,320 but it's still fit for purpose today. 220 00:13:37,000 --> 00:13:39,840 To get a flavour of how the Vikings survived long voyages 221 00:13:39,840 --> 00:13:41,400 without fresh food, 222 00:13:41,400 --> 00:13:45,840 Captain Esben Jessen is introducing me to the medieval equivalent 223 00:13:45,840 --> 00:13:47,800 of astronaut grub. 224 00:13:47,800 --> 00:13:51,840 We have a variety here of smoked lamb, it's actually smoked 225 00:13:51,840 --> 00:13:54,960 over reindeer droppings, so it has a little tang to it. 226 00:13:54,960 --> 00:13:57,120 OK, here we go. 227 00:13:58,280 --> 00:13:59,520 Lovely! 228 00:13:59,520 --> 00:14:03,320 That reindeer droppings are really cutting through there, very nice. 229 00:14:03,320 --> 00:14:04,840 It's good. 230 00:14:04,840 --> 00:14:07,080 - And then we a have dried cod. - That, I can smell - 231 00:14:07,080 --> 00:14:10,000 - even in a big wind on this foredeck, I can smell it. - Yes, it's amazing. 232 00:14:10,000 --> 00:14:12,400 - it's just fantastic. - It's amazing. - It's a little chewy. 233 00:14:16,640 --> 00:14:20,720 Oh, yeah! It's like gnawing on a bit of canvas. 234 00:14:20,720 --> 00:14:23,160 But then when you smoke it, or you dry it, 235 00:14:23,160 --> 00:14:26,480 or as these two pickled herrings, here, then this would actually, 236 00:14:26,480 --> 00:14:28,680 it could last for weeks, or months, even. 237 00:14:31,480 --> 00:14:35,320 But the Vikings didn't just design ships to ply the open seas. 238 00:14:35,320 --> 00:14:37,440 They also built them to attack 239 00:14:37,440 --> 00:14:39,440 when and where they wanted. 240 00:14:41,280 --> 00:14:43,600 So, the interesting thing about this 241 00:14:43,600 --> 00:14:46,280 is that it's a really flexible construction. 242 00:14:46,280 --> 00:14:51,280 At Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, boat builder Martin Rodevad Dael 243 00:14:51,280 --> 00:14:55,560 shows me what made the longship the ultimate attack weapon. 244 00:14:55,560 --> 00:15:00,640 - So, if you sort of move it, you can see that it's really... - Whoa! 245 00:15:01,960 --> 00:15:03,920 ..move it a little bit, you can tell how... 246 00:15:03,920 --> 00:15:05,880 - That's amazing! - ..the whole thing is... 247 00:15:05,880 --> 00:15:08,640 - The whole thing is just twisting like this. - ..twisting. 248 00:15:08,640 --> 00:15:11,720 You can just see the ripples going down the hull there. 249 00:15:14,960 --> 00:15:18,960 Fast and flexible to ride the rollers of the North Atlantic, 250 00:15:18,960 --> 00:15:23,920 with a shallow keel to penetrate any waterway and land on any beach, 251 00:15:23,920 --> 00:15:26,720 this was the Panzer tank of the Dark Ages... 252 00:15:29,800 --> 00:15:33,240 ..and at the end of the 8th century, it began to wreak havoc 253 00:15:33,240 --> 00:15:36,360 as the Vikings swept west out of their homeland 254 00:15:36,360 --> 00:15:39,240 into the turbulent Atlantic in search of riches. 255 00:15:41,080 --> 00:15:45,720 The first place ripe for plunder was the unsuspecting British Isles. 256 00:15:49,680 --> 00:15:52,960 After the Romans withdrew in the 5th century AD, 257 00:15:52,960 --> 00:15:56,280 England was settled by Germanic cousins of the Vikings - 258 00:15:56,280 --> 00:15:58,160 the Angles and the Saxons. 259 00:15:59,880 --> 00:16:03,840 According to the Anglo-Saxons, their peace was then shattered 260 00:16:03,840 --> 00:16:06,240 by Viking smash-and-grab raiders. 261 00:16:08,560 --> 00:16:12,400 This is the familiar story, but is it true? 262 00:16:12,400 --> 00:16:13,880 If you say a Viking to somebody, 263 00:16:13,880 --> 00:16:16,680 of course, they immediately conjure up an image 264 00:16:16,680 --> 00:16:19,000 of bloodthirsty maniacs storming ashore 265 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:21,720 in a brutal raid in search of booty - 266 00:16:21,720 --> 00:16:25,280 but, actually, there's precious little archaeological evidence 267 00:16:25,280 --> 00:16:28,000 to support that view of how they acted. 268 00:16:28,000 --> 00:16:31,520 But there is one place, right up here in the north of Scotland, 269 00:16:31,520 --> 00:16:34,720 that takes us back to Viking shock and awe. 270 00:16:41,480 --> 00:16:45,600 In the 8th century, Portmahomack was a stronghold for the Picts, 271 00:16:45,600 --> 00:16:47,560 the Celtic peoples of Scotland. 272 00:16:50,360 --> 00:16:52,760 When Professor Martin Carver dug here, 273 00:16:52,760 --> 00:16:57,200 he discovered the first Pictish monastery underneath this church. 274 00:16:59,800 --> 00:17:02,480 We've got some reconstructions here, on here. 275 00:17:02,480 --> 00:17:03,680 So, if you move that around, 276 00:17:03,680 --> 00:17:05,680 - you've got your monastery... - OK, that's good. 277 00:17:05,680 --> 00:17:07,440 Right, so, you've - church on the hill... 278 00:17:07,440 --> 00:17:08,840 The buildings on either side... 279 00:17:08,840 --> 00:17:11,800 - It's quite a substantial settlement, this. - It's very substantial. 280 00:17:11,800 --> 00:17:14,240 They're very busy, very wealthy. 281 00:17:14,240 --> 00:17:16,720 It's almost like a town, it's thriving. 282 00:17:16,720 --> 00:17:19,560 It's in contact with monasteries in Ireland, with Northumbria, 283 00:17:19,560 --> 00:17:22,400 across the Channel and so on, a really important place. 284 00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:25,640 However, the Vikings...are coming. 285 00:17:29,720 --> 00:17:32,440 And they were coming for the treasure. 286 00:17:32,440 --> 00:17:37,640 Church silver inlaid with precious stones made by the monks. 287 00:17:39,080 --> 00:17:44,120 For the Vikings, this was a jewellery shop ripe for a ram raid. 288 00:17:44,120 --> 00:17:46,160 They were making chalices. 289 00:17:46,160 --> 00:17:48,600 This is a precious replica - 290 00:17:48,600 --> 00:17:50,360 but what we did find was little studs, 291 00:17:50,360 --> 00:17:53,160 - you see the little studs there? - These kinds of things here? 292 00:17:53,160 --> 00:17:54,400 Yeah, we found some of those. 293 00:17:54,400 --> 00:17:56,040 This was the kind of thing being made? 294 00:17:56,040 --> 00:17:58,680 - The kind of thing they were making. - Wow! 295 00:17:58,680 --> 00:18:01,800 I think it's difficult to exaggerate the amount of wealth involved 296 00:18:01,800 --> 00:18:06,040 and the amount of enthusiasm that was involved. 297 00:18:06,040 --> 00:18:07,400 Then this... 298 00:18:09,520 --> 00:18:10,800 ..a monk's skull. 299 00:18:12,280 --> 00:18:13,720 It was violent. 300 00:18:13,720 --> 00:18:17,600 - You see the cut mark of the sword there? - Whoa! 301 00:18:17,600 --> 00:18:18,800 - On there? - That's... 302 00:18:18,800 --> 00:18:21,920 - That is a sword cutting somebody's head? - That is a sword cut mark. 303 00:18:21,920 --> 00:18:25,640 The cuts are being made on the top of the head and behind the head. 304 00:18:26,680 --> 00:18:30,000 He must have been, not only attacked from behind, but kneeling. 305 00:18:30,000 --> 00:18:32,760 Bang, bang, bang. Three cuts. 306 00:18:32,760 --> 00:18:35,240 For the first time, it looks like you've been able to prove 307 00:18:35,240 --> 00:18:38,680 that the Vikings came here, slaughtered the monks 308 00:18:38,680 --> 00:18:42,440 and wiped out a flourishing, wealthy monastic site. 309 00:18:45,480 --> 00:18:47,200 SOUNDS OF BATTLE 310 00:18:48,400 --> 00:18:49,440 WOMAN SCREAMS 311 00:18:53,520 --> 00:18:58,640 The sea had brought this settlement wealth and importance... 312 00:19:00,680 --> 00:19:02,800 ..but not that day. 313 00:19:02,800 --> 00:19:06,720 That day it brought fire and death. 314 00:19:07,840 --> 00:19:09,920 That day it brought the Vikings. 315 00:19:12,000 --> 00:19:16,360 Soon, the raiders would return as conquerors. 316 00:19:16,360 --> 00:19:19,960 This time they would come to stay - another staging post 317 00:19:19,960 --> 00:19:22,560 on their journey west across the Atlantic. 318 00:19:25,960 --> 00:19:30,560 On the other side of that ocean, Sarah is making plans. 319 00:19:30,560 --> 00:19:34,720 Before she can dig the potential new site in south-west Newfoundland, 320 00:19:34,720 --> 00:19:39,240 she still needs to convince the authorities to grant permission. 321 00:19:39,240 --> 00:19:42,160 Step one is non-invasive surveys. 322 00:19:42,160 --> 00:19:47,000 We have to go out on the ground and use a magnetometer to measure 323 00:19:47,000 --> 00:19:50,160 what might be buried beneath the ground. 324 00:19:50,160 --> 00:19:52,640 What we do is called ground truthing. 325 00:19:52,640 --> 00:19:55,280 It literally means, we are confirming whether or not 326 00:19:55,280 --> 00:19:58,120 what we've seen from space is actually on the ground 327 00:19:58,120 --> 00:19:59,920 and it's an essential thing you have to do 328 00:19:59,920 --> 00:20:01,640 before you start excavation. 329 00:20:05,040 --> 00:20:07,280 As Sarah awaits the results, 330 00:20:07,280 --> 00:20:11,320 she sets out to learn what a typical Viking site in America looked like. 331 00:20:14,560 --> 00:20:18,040 As there's only one, she's on her way to L'Anse aux Meadows, 332 00:20:18,040 --> 00:20:21,160 the Viking camp discovered on the northern tip of Newfoundland 333 00:20:21,160 --> 00:20:23,000 in the 1960s. 334 00:20:23,000 --> 00:20:24,560 THEY CHEER 335 00:20:29,360 --> 00:20:32,280 I can't even imagine being a Viking in a boat 336 00:20:32,280 --> 00:20:37,160 and sailing by icebergs the size of a mountain. 337 00:20:37,160 --> 00:20:40,280 It gives you a sense of just how intrepid and brave they were, 338 00:20:40,280 --> 00:20:42,000 of seeking new worlds. 339 00:20:47,600 --> 00:20:50,920 One of the pioneering excavators of the historic site, 340 00:20:50,920 --> 00:20:53,960 Birgitta Wallace, is there to meet Sarah. 341 00:20:56,440 --> 00:20:58,880 There are eight buildings on the site 342 00:20:58,880 --> 00:21:01,880 and they are divided into four complexes. 343 00:21:03,520 --> 00:21:05,280 Up to 90 people lived here. 344 00:21:05,280 --> 00:21:08,000 Each building had a different function. 345 00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:10,400 This is one. 346 00:21:10,400 --> 00:21:14,680 It consists of a smelting furnace for iron. 347 00:21:16,360 --> 00:21:20,120 Metalworking was crucial evidence that this was a Viking camp. 348 00:21:20,120 --> 00:21:23,760 No-one else living in this region at the time produced metal. 349 00:21:25,720 --> 00:21:30,000 The reconstructed buildings made of cut turf are critical clues 350 00:21:30,000 --> 00:21:33,960 for when Sarah gets to dig her site further to the south-west. 351 00:21:36,200 --> 00:21:37,920 This is fantastic. 352 00:21:39,680 --> 00:21:45,440 This is the first time I've seen turf houses in person. 353 00:21:45,440 --> 00:21:50,000 So, I'm just looking at the layout of the turf 354 00:21:50,000 --> 00:21:52,520 on each of the houses and sheds. 355 00:21:54,400 --> 00:21:56,720 These thick walls 356 00:21:56,720 --> 00:21:59,880 would have been absolutely perfect natural insulation - 357 00:21:59,880 --> 00:22:01,800 and the nice thing about turf 358 00:22:01,800 --> 00:22:04,520 is you can get any piece of turf to fit together. 359 00:22:04,520 --> 00:22:06,240 It's like all-natural Lego. 360 00:22:07,360 --> 00:22:10,800 And there's one other major clue from L'Anse aux Meadows. 361 00:22:10,800 --> 00:22:15,240 It reinforces the account of Leif's voyage in the saga of Erik the Red. 362 00:22:17,640 --> 00:22:24,000 The most exciting was the finding of three butternuts. 363 00:22:26,160 --> 00:22:28,280 Butternuts - a kind of walnut - 364 00:22:28,280 --> 00:22:31,840 only grow as far north as New Brunswick on the mainland, 365 00:22:31,840 --> 00:22:33,480 hundreds of miles away. 366 00:22:35,040 --> 00:22:38,080 It suggests the Vikings were exploring much further 367 00:22:38,080 --> 00:22:39,960 into North America. 368 00:22:41,560 --> 00:22:46,400 They grow in exactly the same areas as wild grapes in New Brunswick. 369 00:22:46,400 --> 00:22:50,680 And to us that proves that, yes, 370 00:22:50,680 --> 00:22:54,760 they had really observed wild grapes 371 00:22:54,760 --> 00:22:58,760 and named their country after them - Vinland. 372 00:23:01,000 --> 00:23:05,640 L'Anse aux Meadows has given Sarah vital clues about what to look for - 373 00:23:05,640 --> 00:23:08,800 turf buildings and metalworking at her site 374 00:23:08,800 --> 00:23:10,880 400 miles to the south-west. 375 00:23:12,040 --> 00:23:16,360 Could it really be one of the lost settlements of the mythical Vinland? 376 00:23:18,040 --> 00:23:20,720 Well, we'll have to see what we find when we dig! 377 00:23:29,760 --> 00:23:33,360 In Britain, I'm exploring the Viking transformation 378 00:23:33,360 --> 00:23:36,880 from small-scale raiders to full-scale conquerors, 379 00:23:36,880 --> 00:23:39,000 in their quest for new lands. 380 00:23:40,480 --> 00:23:45,560 In 865, the Christian peace of Anglo-Saxon England was shattered 381 00:23:45,560 --> 00:23:49,640 by a pagan Viking invasion, whose leaders included warriors 382 00:23:49,640 --> 00:23:53,040 with names as vivid as Ivar the Boneless. 383 00:23:54,160 --> 00:23:59,400 For the next 13 years, what became known as the Great Heathen Army 384 00:23:59,400 --> 00:24:04,360 rampaged across the country causing chaos and destruction. 385 00:24:06,760 --> 00:24:09,920 Each winter, they would huddle together, building big camps 386 00:24:09,920 --> 00:24:13,080 containing thousands of warriors, where they'd lick their wounds 387 00:24:13,080 --> 00:24:15,640 and prepare for the next season's campaign. 388 00:24:18,560 --> 00:24:21,960 According to the Anglo-Saxons, one of the most important camps 389 00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:25,040 was on the River Trent in the winter of 873... 390 00:24:27,040 --> 00:24:29,560 ..at Repton in Derbyshire. 391 00:24:31,280 --> 00:24:35,240 It was the religious epicentre of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Mercia. 392 00:24:39,240 --> 00:24:42,240 - It's a tight stair, Dan... - Tight squeeze! 393 00:24:42,240 --> 00:24:45,240 ..and it's probably pretty ropey. 394 00:24:45,240 --> 00:24:47,440 Archaeologist Professor Martin Biddle 395 00:24:47,440 --> 00:24:51,240 started out looking for Anglo-Saxon remains. 396 00:24:51,240 --> 00:24:55,280 It is about 30 years since I've been up here. 397 00:24:55,280 --> 00:24:59,280 He had little idea he'd soon uncover one of the most important sites 398 00:24:59,280 --> 00:25:02,240 in the history of the Vikings in Britain. 399 00:25:02,240 --> 00:25:04,840 Right, now these are quite a long pull, 400 00:25:04,840 --> 00:25:07,840 and I hope I don't go flat on my face. No. We've done it. 401 00:25:07,840 --> 00:25:10,600 Out into safety in the bright sun. 402 00:25:10,600 --> 00:25:11,720 Gosh! 403 00:25:15,040 --> 00:25:18,120 - What a great view! - The great valley of the Trent. 404 00:25:18,120 --> 00:25:21,200 - And we are as far from the sea as you can get in the UK? - Just about. 405 00:25:21,200 --> 00:25:22,800 Just about. Yeah. 406 00:25:24,240 --> 00:25:27,840 The Viking camp was lost until Martin started to dig 407 00:25:27,840 --> 00:25:29,880 in the grounds of Repton School. 408 00:25:31,040 --> 00:25:34,200 Just over there, beyond the headmaster's house, 409 00:25:34,200 --> 00:25:36,040 as it is today, of the school, 410 00:25:36,040 --> 00:25:37,360 the ditch started there 411 00:25:37,360 --> 00:25:40,200 and it curved right back under the school building 412 00:25:40,200 --> 00:25:44,440 and came back and stopped against the east end of the church. 413 00:25:44,440 --> 00:25:48,160 Martin's excavations suggested a defensive ditch 414 00:25:48,160 --> 00:25:50,040 closed off by the river. 415 00:25:50,040 --> 00:25:52,960 - So, that's just... - Oh, my gosh. - Let's see what we can see. 416 00:25:52,960 --> 00:25:54,880 Something modern on the top of the tower. 417 00:25:54,880 --> 00:25:56,560 So that is a serious camp. 418 00:25:56,560 --> 00:25:59,640 The ditch is about four metres deep, about five metres wide at the top. 419 00:25:59,640 --> 00:26:03,040 And so these are not Vikings raiding the coast, 420 00:26:03,040 --> 00:26:07,680 these are Vikings with huge armies marching right in. Nowhere is safe. 421 00:26:07,680 --> 00:26:09,200 Nowhere is safe. 422 00:26:12,600 --> 00:26:14,880 The threat wasn't just a military one. 423 00:26:14,880 --> 00:26:17,960 The camps were becoming hubs of trade and industry, 424 00:26:17,960 --> 00:26:19,920 just like mobile towns... 425 00:26:23,720 --> 00:26:26,840 ..but the invaders didn't have it all their own way. 426 00:26:26,840 --> 00:26:29,680 Do we know anything about what the English were able to do in return? 427 00:26:29,680 --> 00:26:31,360 Yeah, we do. Quite a lot, actually - 428 00:26:31,360 --> 00:26:34,040 because of a marvellous grave we found just down there. 429 00:26:34,040 --> 00:26:36,640 We couldn't understand it, cos it seemed to have three legs. 430 00:26:36,640 --> 00:26:37,840 It didn't have three legs. 431 00:26:37,840 --> 00:26:41,400 It had two legs, plus an iron sword down his left side in its scabbard, 432 00:26:41,400 --> 00:26:44,480 and we found that there was a huge cut 433 00:26:44,480 --> 00:26:48,240 in the underside of the left part of the top of the femur - 434 00:26:48,240 --> 00:26:50,600 and you can imagine somebody going down like that, 435 00:26:50,600 --> 00:26:54,080 and it must have castrated him because between his legs 436 00:26:54,080 --> 00:26:59,200 we found a wild boar's tusk, which is laid out quite obviously as... 437 00:26:59,200 --> 00:27:01,400 - A replacement! - ..a replacement! 438 00:27:01,400 --> 00:27:04,960 And round his neck, he had a necklace with some glass beads 439 00:27:04,960 --> 00:27:08,720 - and a silver hammer of the god Thor. - That's a Viking. 440 00:27:10,200 --> 00:27:15,400 The Vikings left their pagan mark all over this holy Christian centre. 441 00:27:15,400 --> 00:27:20,240 In the vicarage garden, Martin discovered a mass heathen burial. 442 00:27:22,960 --> 00:27:25,800 We took photographs at every single stage of this operation. 443 00:27:25,800 --> 00:27:28,720 - Yes, look at that. - What? Are those bones?! 444 00:27:28,720 --> 00:27:32,360 - Those are the bones in the eastern compartment. - No! Wow. 445 00:27:34,120 --> 00:27:36,280 A layer of bones about that thick 446 00:27:36,280 --> 00:27:38,000 and they are the big bones, 447 00:27:38,000 --> 00:27:40,200 and they've been brought from somewhere - 448 00:27:40,200 --> 00:27:42,000 that's why the small bones aren't there - 449 00:27:42,000 --> 00:27:43,880 and they were stacked beautifully. 450 00:27:43,880 --> 00:27:45,160 What we call charnel-wise, 451 00:27:45,160 --> 00:27:47,280 like a medieval charnel house - a bone house. 452 00:27:47,280 --> 00:27:48,480 A bit like that. 453 00:27:50,440 --> 00:27:55,000 The most likely explanation is that these are the bodies of Viking dead 454 00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:58,440 carried back to be honoured in secure Viking territory. 455 00:28:00,480 --> 00:28:04,880 Over 260 people, 80% male. 456 00:28:04,880 --> 00:28:08,360 They're mainly young adults, no children. 457 00:28:08,360 --> 00:28:10,880 It's a very highly-selected population. 458 00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:13,560 They have been reburied here around somebody. 459 00:28:15,560 --> 00:28:18,400 Martin has built up a picture of what happened here 460 00:28:18,400 --> 00:28:22,640 from a 17th century account by a gardener who'd disturbed the burial. 461 00:28:24,240 --> 00:28:29,480 - He found "the skeleton of a humane man nine feet long." - Wow. 462 00:28:29,480 --> 00:28:33,400 And around that "there were the bodies of an hundred others 463 00:28:33,400 --> 00:28:36,560 "with their feet pointing towards the central grave." 464 00:28:38,320 --> 00:28:42,320 Martin thinks the giant was a war leader. 465 00:28:42,320 --> 00:28:45,760 We think it's the burial of Ivar Beinlausi. 466 00:28:45,760 --> 00:28:47,320 So, this is Ivar the Boneless, 467 00:28:47,320 --> 00:28:49,880 who is one of the most famous Viking commanders. 468 00:28:49,880 --> 00:28:54,240 And one of the leaders of the Great Army that arrived in Essex in 865 469 00:28:54,240 --> 00:28:58,120 and which was here in the winter of 873-4 470 00:28:58,120 --> 00:29:00,840 after ten years of campaigning, for the last time. 471 00:29:03,240 --> 00:29:06,640 Burying their leaders in the heart of the English countryside 472 00:29:06,640 --> 00:29:10,400 suggests these Vikings were putting down roots - 473 00:29:10,400 --> 00:29:13,200 just like Viking pioneers had already done 474 00:29:13,200 --> 00:29:15,280 on the Atlantic fringes of Scotland. 475 00:29:21,440 --> 00:29:25,080 And that's where Sarah and her team are testing out her methods 476 00:29:25,080 --> 00:29:28,160 on the ground, before she's allowed to dig in America. 477 00:29:30,320 --> 00:29:32,600 She is focusing on a potential site 478 00:29:32,600 --> 00:29:36,720 on the tiny Orkney island of Auskerry. 479 00:29:41,480 --> 00:29:44,960 Can she prove the technology will work in the new conditions 480 00:29:44,960 --> 00:29:47,080 of the North Atlantic? 481 00:29:47,080 --> 00:29:52,040 So, Dan, we've just had some news back about Scotland 482 00:29:52,040 --> 00:29:55,000 from our team on the ground. 483 00:29:55,000 --> 00:29:59,280 Now, the experts were convinced 484 00:29:59,280 --> 00:30:02,000 that this was a potential long house. 485 00:30:04,720 --> 00:30:09,520 - Unfortunately, it turns out this is modern peat cutting. - What? 486 00:30:10,920 --> 00:30:13,800 I mean, Sarah, it's not your best work, I've got to say. But... 487 00:30:13,800 --> 00:30:15,920 Yeah - you know, all is not lost. 488 00:30:17,320 --> 00:30:20,600 But Sarah may have better luck in nearby Shetland, 489 00:30:20,600 --> 00:30:24,920 in a place already known for artefacts from the late Viking era. 490 00:30:24,920 --> 00:30:28,280 And something very cool has just come up. 491 00:30:28,280 --> 00:30:31,720 This is a place called North House in Shetland. 492 00:30:34,160 --> 00:30:39,320 Here we have a modern farmstead, but take a look at that! 493 00:30:39,320 --> 00:30:42,080 That is very interesting there. Is this the modern settlement? 494 00:30:42,080 --> 00:30:44,480 So, it's right on the edge of the modern settlement... 495 00:30:44,480 --> 00:30:46,840 But you cannot see this at all, visually. 496 00:30:46,840 --> 00:30:49,240 That is very interesting... Is this the coast here? 497 00:30:49,240 --> 00:30:51,840 - Yeah, this is the coastline. - So, again, right on the coast. 498 00:30:51,840 --> 00:30:54,760 And, you know, I'm really excited by this potential find, 499 00:30:54,760 --> 00:30:56,400 especially since they're finding 500 00:30:56,400 --> 00:30:58,400 Viking material culture there already. 501 00:31:06,240 --> 00:31:08,200 Now, we are going to go excavate 502 00:31:08,200 --> 00:31:10,680 to find out what's there, or what isn't. 503 00:31:12,560 --> 00:31:16,320 Sarah is joining her team, who've already been digging for a week. 504 00:31:18,600 --> 00:31:21,520 I'm hopeful that we could potentially find something Norse. 505 00:31:21,520 --> 00:31:23,400 I guess we'll just have to wait and see. 506 00:31:23,400 --> 00:31:25,960 I can't wait to get my hands dirty. 507 00:31:25,960 --> 00:31:28,880 - Welcome to North House. - Thank you! How's it all going? 508 00:31:28,880 --> 00:31:31,080 It's going quite well. I think we've... 509 00:31:31,080 --> 00:31:33,840 Archaeologist Rick Barton has started the dig. 510 00:31:35,680 --> 00:31:39,080 After mistaking a peat cutting for a Viking site, 511 00:31:39,080 --> 00:31:41,280 there is a lot riding on this for Sarah. 512 00:31:43,440 --> 00:31:45,320 It looks like a wall. 513 00:31:45,320 --> 00:31:47,800 - We've got walls. - Excellent. 514 00:31:52,200 --> 00:31:53,880 That is a big wall. 515 00:31:56,120 --> 00:32:01,120 - Yeah, yeah. OK, are you ready? - OK, yeah. Ready, one, two, three... 516 00:32:01,120 --> 00:32:03,000 As the excavation progresses, 517 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:05,560 it's clear that the wall they're following 518 00:32:05,560 --> 00:32:07,520 matches the satellite imagery. 519 00:32:07,520 --> 00:32:11,760 That's that curvy bit, so the edge is right here. 520 00:32:11,760 --> 00:32:14,400 The technology once used to find pyramids 521 00:32:14,400 --> 00:32:18,120 has proved itself on Sarah's greatest challenge. 522 00:32:18,120 --> 00:32:21,480 It has found something as small as buried walls. 523 00:32:22,520 --> 00:32:24,520 But is this a Viking site? 524 00:32:27,840 --> 00:32:30,400 I've heard rumours. Oh! 525 00:32:30,400 --> 00:32:33,200 - It's a bead. Faceted. - Oh! 526 00:32:33,200 --> 00:32:34,720 And if you hold it up to the light, 527 00:32:34,720 --> 00:32:37,720 - you can see where the thread hole goes through it. - Oh, yeah, yeah. 528 00:32:37,720 --> 00:32:39,680 That's amazing. 529 00:32:39,680 --> 00:32:41,560 It's not just any old bead - 530 00:32:41,560 --> 00:32:45,440 it's made of the semiprecious stone carnelian, possibly from India. 531 00:32:45,440 --> 00:32:46,800 Wow! 532 00:32:46,800 --> 00:32:51,280 These people weren't just expanding west. They were trading east, too. 533 00:32:53,240 --> 00:32:55,160 Look at that - beautiful! 534 00:32:55,160 --> 00:32:57,440 - Well done, Tom! - Thank you, cheers. - Well done. 535 00:32:57,440 --> 00:32:59,640 - I think there's a pint in store. - Yes. 536 00:33:00,920 --> 00:33:03,480 I was uncertain when we went to Scotland what we'd find, 537 00:33:03,480 --> 00:33:07,400 but now that we've actually found this incredible stone structure, 538 00:33:07,400 --> 00:33:09,320 that gives me a lot more optimism 539 00:33:09,320 --> 00:33:12,400 about what we may find in Iceland and in Newfoundland. 540 00:33:14,160 --> 00:33:16,680 While Sarah sets up her final test, 541 00:33:16,680 --> 00:33:19,200 waiting for permission to dig in Newfoundland, 542 00:33:19,200 --> 00:33:22,880 I'm exploring what the Vikings did next in mainland Britain. 543 00:33:27,960 --> 00:33:32,080 In 876, they made their capital in Jorvik, 544 00:33:32,080 --> 00:33:34,880 the Viking name for York. 545 00:33:34,880 --> 00:33:39,000 It became the centre of a Viking state in England, 546 00:33:39,000 --> 00:33:41,680 later known as the Danelaw. 547 00:33:45,480 --> 00:33:50,120 In York, the raiders and settlers became successful urban traders 548 00:33:50,120 --> 00:33:54,720 and manufacturers in the first industrial revolution. 549 00:33:54,720 --> 00:33:57,080 The extent of their trading is revealed 550 00:33:57,080 --> 00:33:59,080 in their most prized possessions. 551 00:34:01,080 --> 00:34:02,680 Look at this! 552 00:34:02,680 --> 00:34:04,600 - It's fantastic, isn't it? - Wow! 553 00:34:04,600 --> 00:34:06,600 That looks like it's brand-new! 554 00:34:08,320 --> 00:34:12,400 Dr Andy Woods is curator of a unique Viking treasure trove - 555 00:34:12,400 --> 00:34:13,800 the Vale of York Hoard. 556 00:34:14,960 --> 00:34:17,840 It's just mesmerising, isn't it? 557 00:34:17,840 --> 00:34:21,000 Some of the hoard is typical raiders' booty, 558 00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:24,680 but it also reveals what else made the Vikings tick. 559 00:34:24,680 --> 00:34:27,760 If they couldn't steal it, they'd trade it. 560 00:34:29,720 --> 00:34:32,240 We have coins that come all the way from Uzbekistan. 561 00:34:32,240 --> 00:34:34,840 - Uzbekistan? - They're struck in Samarkand in Uzbekistan. 562 00:34:34,840 --> 00:34:39,120 What?! Arabic writing found in a hoard... 563 00:34:39,120 --> 00:34:41,240 - In northern England. - ..in northern England. 564 00:34:41,240 --> 00:34:44,360 And if you look in Scandinavia we find vast quantities of these, 565 00:34:44,360 --> 00:34:48,080 what are known as dirhams - and, so, that's just amongst the coinage. 566 00:34:48,080 --> 00:34:51,080 More widely, here, we have this piece of ring, 567 00:34:51,080 --> 00:34:52,720 probably made in Russia, 568 00:34:52,720 --> 00:34:57,160 and this fragment of brooch here, which is likely of Irish design. 569 00:34:57,160 --> 00:34:59,040 So, what we can see is, you get this network 570 00:34:59,040 --> 00:35:00,560 stretching right across Europe. 571 00:35:00,560 --> 00:35:02,080 Uzbekistan, 572 00:35:02,080 --> 00:35:03,480 Ireland, 573 00:35:03,480 --> 00:35:06,280 - Russia. - Yes, all on one tray. 574 00:35:06,280 --> 00:35:07,960 It's quite fantastic, isn't it? 575 00:35:07,960 --> 00:35:09,520 We talk about globalisation today, 576 00:35:09,520 --> 00:35:11,200 but clearly it was going on back then. 577 00:35:11,200 --> 00:35:14,440 People and things were travelling over huge distances. 578 00:35:16,720 --> 00:35:20,120 And this isn't Viking York's only buried treasure. 579 00:35:24,000 --> 00:35:29,280 What excites Dr Andrew Jones isn't silver or gold, 580 00:35:29,280 --> 00:35:32,920 it's a rather more base material found beneath its streets. 581 00:35:37,000 --> 00:35:39,600 I would say that where we are sitting now, 582 00:35:39,600 --> 00:35:42,640 there is probably ten metres of archaeological deposits 583 00:35:42,640 --> 00:35:44,080 below our feet, 584 00:35:44,080 --> 00:35:48,960 and probably at least three metres of that is human excrement. 585 00:35:48,960 --> 00:35:50,920 - Really? - I believe so. 586 00:35:50,920 --> 00:35:52,640 Wow. And what can excrement tell us? 587 00:35:52,640 --> 00:35:56,160 It tells you about diet, what people were eating. 588 00:35:56,160 --> 00:35:59,680 Andrew is a scatologist. He studies poo. 589 00:35:59,680 --> 00:36:01,520 And he's brought along a model 590 00:36:01,520 --> 00:36:04,120 of his favourite specimen to the tea shop. 591 00:36:04,120 --> 00:36:07,760 - The best thing is to show you this object here... - Oh, my God! 592 00:36:07,760 --> 00:36:11,960 This is the best-preserved piece of ancient mineralised excrement. 593 00:36:11,960 --> 00:36:15,920 It's the largest individual stool we have ever found in Europe. 594 00:36:15,920 --> 00:36:20,440 Some people call it the crown jewels of British excrement. 595 00:36:22,680 --> 00:36:27,120 The poo reveals the rich and diverse diet enjoyed by York's citizens. 596 00:36:29,480 --> 00:36:31,800 It's mainly cereal bran, 597 00:36:31,800 --> 00:36:35,920 but we've even found some samples which have whole grains in them 598 00:36:35,920 --> 00:36:38,160 - that have been cooked, a bit like a rice pudding. - OK. 599 00:36:38,160 --> 00:36:40,920 So, we're moving into understanding about cooking methods, 600 00:36:40,920 --> 00:36:43,440 not just ingredients, so that's fantastic. 601 00:36:43,440 --> 00:36:46,880 The Vikings of York were living off the fat of the land. 602 00:36:46,880 --> 00:36:50,240 Loads of fish, very large numbers of birds. 603 00:36:50,240 --> 00:36:54,280 Now, the big things on diet, of course... Moo! 604 00:36:54,280 --> 00:36:55,480 HE LAUGHS 605 00:36:55,480 --> 00:36:58,280 - These are... - Cow. - ..cattle bones. There's a lot of beef. 606 00:36:58,280 --> 00:37:02,960 And so most of the farmers in the area were providing animals 607 00:37:02,960 --> 00:37:05,400 that were brought into the market for slaughter here. 608 00:37:05,400 --> 00:37:08,440 So, that suggests there was a lot of food around. 609 00:37:08,440 --> 00:37:12,400 The poo also lifts the lid on the perils of living in thriving, 610 00:37:12,400 --> 00:37:14,600 overcrowded towns. 611 00:37:14,600 --> 00:37:17,960 But it also had many thousands of parasite eggs. 612 00:37:17,960 --> 00:37:20,760 The ascaris worms, they bore through the gut wall 613 00:37:20,760 --> 00:37:24,320 and sometimes have been known to emerge 614 00:37:24,320 --> 00:37:27,120 from every orifice of the human body, 615 00:37:27,120 --> 00:37:29,640 including the corner of your eye. 616 00:37:29,640 --> 00:37:31,600 They're a fact of Viking life. 617 00:37:31,600 --> 00:37:35,440 Why, if you were a Viking, why would you want to come to York, 618 00:37:35,440 --> 00:37:38,440 if it's going to make you a bit sick and it's covered in poo? 619 00:37:38,440 --> 00:37:41,960 Well, York was a really important place to the Viking world - 620 00:37:41,960 --> 00:37:44,760 it was the capital of Viking England. 621 00:37:44,760 --> 00:37:47,360 It was where all the bright craftspeople, 622 00:37:47,360 --> 00:37:49,280 all the bright money-making people, 623 00:37:49,280 --> 00:37:51,800 all the adventurers would come to cluster 624 00:37:51,800 --> 00:37:53,960 and where the powerful people were. 625 00:37:57,600 --> 00:37:59,440 What the things that have been found 626 00:37:59,440 --> 00:38:01,280 beneath our feet here in York tell us 627 00:38:01,280 --> 00:38:04,200 is that the Vikings thrived, they got rich, they traded, 628 00:38:04,200 --> 00:38:08,920 they made stuff and they pioneered a new way of urban living here 629 00:38:08,920 --> 00:38:12,920 that sent ripples out across the rest of the British Isles. 630 00:38:16,280 --> 00:38:20,000 Viking York became one of the most important urban centres 631 00:38:20,000 --> 00:38:21,520 in Western Europe. 632 00:38:25,640 --> 00:38:29,000 It was part of a trading and raiding empire 633 00:38:29,000 --> 00:38:32,560 that stretched as far east as the Caspian Sea 634 00:38:32,560 --> 00:38:35,920 and as far south as Africa, 635 00:38:35,920 --> 00:38:39,360 and at the height of their powers, the Vikings pushed further west 636 00:38:39,360 --> 00:38:43,240 across the North Atlantic in their search for new worlds. 637 00:38:44,720 --> 00:38:49,040 Their next major port of call was Iceland, 638 00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:52,560 and it provides the final test for Sarah's technology. 639 00:38:55,000 --> 00:38:58,680 Any new site in America could be made out of turf, 640 00:38:58,680 --> 00:39:01,440 just like those buildings at L'Anse aux Meadows 641 00:39:01,440 --> 00:39:03,800 and most Viking dwellings in Iceland. 642 00:39:06,600 --> 00:39:10,000 Spotting turf, buried beneath turf, 643 00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:12,840 from space will be tough. 644 00:39:13,960 --> 00:39:16,160 One man who may be able to help Sarah 645 00:39:16,160 --> 00:39:19,680 is Viking expert Dr Doug Bolender. 646 00:39:19,680 --> 00:39:23,360 He will be the first Viking specialist that has seen the work 647 00:39:23,360 --> 00:39:26,640 that we've done in Iceland. So, I'm quite apprehensive. 648 00:39:27,760 --> 00:39:31,040 Doug has spent 15 years searching for Viking sites 649 00:39:31,040 --> 00:39:33,120 in the North Atlantic... 650 00:39:33,120 --> 00:39:37,440 but he's sceptical about what Sarah might be seeing in North America. 651 00:39:39,200 --> 00:39:44,520 I mean, it could be a small raised section of rock or sand. 652 00:39:44,520 --> 00:39:49,160 As human beings, we are basically made 653 00:39:49,160 --> 00:39:51,320 to recognise patterns 654 00:39:51,320 --> 00:39:54,560 and not only are we really good at recognising patterns, 655 00:39:54,560 --> 00:39:56,720 we're really good at making them up. 656 00:39:56,720 --> 00:39:58,840 You can certainly look and say, you know, 657 00:39:58,840 --> 00:40:03,280 that looks like a rectangle, it looks like a structure. 658 00:40:03,280 --> 00:40:07,480 But many of the things that look like buildings in this image 659 00:40:07,480 --> 00:40:09,920 do seem to match the geology - 660 00:40:09,920 --> 00:40:12,360 and, about those, I'm extremely suspicious. 661 00:40:13,440 --> 00:40:15,720 For Sarah, this is her biggest test. 662 00:40:15,720 --> 00:40:18,800 If she can spot buried turf walls in Iceland, 663 00:40:18,800 --> 00:40:21,480 she may have a chance in America. 664 00:40:21,480 --> 00:40:24,280 We focused in on one area in particular. 665 00:40:24,280 --> 00:40:27,240 So, yeah, we've got a series of fields. 666 00:40:27,240 --> 00:40:29,640 You've got a couple of different shades of green, 667 00:40:29,640 --> 00:40:32,040 but it looks completely homogenous. 668 00:40:32,040 --> 00:40:35,920 Then when we started processing the data using the near infrared, 669 00:40:35,920 --> 00:40:40,160 all of a sudden some really interesting shapes started popping. 670 00:40:40,160 --> 00:40:42,720 Well, the first thing that pops out of this 671 00:40:42,720 --> 00:40:45,800 is that it looks like there is something here. 672 00:40:45,800 --> 00:40:48,440 The size looks about right. 673 00:40:48,440 --> 00:40:51,560 It is at least suggestive of something like a farmstead. 674 00:40:51,560 --> 00:40:53,440 Which is exciting. 675 00:40:58,280 --> 00:41:03,640 If there was one potential site that I wanted to pop up, 676 00:41:03,640 --> 00:41:09,360 this would be the place that I would want to see something to go after. 677 00:41:09,360 --> 00:41:11,640 I'm just excited that it actually is showing - 678 00:41:11,640 --> 00:41:13,240 something is showing up there. 679 00:41:14,360 --> 00:41:18,040 It's the first time an expert has seen the work that I've done 680 00:41:18,040 --> 00:41:22,160 in Iceland and confirmed it, so I couldn't have been more thrilled. 681 00:41:23,800 --> 00:41:26,520 Sarah will now head to Iceland to check out 682 00:41:26,520 --> 00:41:29,520 if the buried turf structures she spotted from space 683 00:41:29,520 --> 00:41:31,560 are actually there. 684 00:41:38,360 --> 00:41:41,440 It would have taken the Vikings more than a week in good weather 685 00:41:41,440 --> 00:41:45,320 to sail to Iceland, so I want to explore how they made it. 686 00:41:51,600 --> 00:41:54,520 Very tiring. Got to sleep when you can when you're at sea. 687 00:41:56,240 --> 00:41:58,560 Keep you going through the night. 688 00:42:01,560 --> 00:42:05,920 Voyaging across the North Atlantic is fraught with uncertainty. 689 00:42:05,920 --> 00:42:09,040 According to Captain Esben, the Vikings were experts 690 00:42:09,040 --> 00:42:12,520 at guessing where land was, using subtle clues. 691 00:42:14,000 --> 00:42:17,440 That could be everything from the smell of the grass, 692 00:42:17,440 --> 00:42:20,560 or the pine trees you can smell before you see the land. 693 00:42:20,560 --> 00:42:23,200 It could be forming clouds over land, it could be sea birds 694 00:42:23,200 --> 00:42:25,520 that are nesting on land, so they fly back every night 695 00:42:25,520 --> 00:42:27,640 when they've been out fishing, 696 00:42:27,640 --> 00:42:30,880 it could be reflecting wave from the shoreline. 697 00:42:30,880 --> 00:42:34,040 So, actually, the Vikings didn't have to hit the nail on the head, 698 00:42:34,040 --> 00:42:37,120 they could get to within 50 or 60 miles of an island 699 00:42:37,120 --> 00:42:39,680 and then they would get clues that would allow them to re-set 700 00:42:39,680 --> 00:42:42,520 - and actually hit the landfall they wanted. - Yeah, exactly. 701 00:42:45,120 --> 00:42:47,000 But in the middle of the vast ocean 702 00:42:47,000 --> 00:42:49,880 they needed different navigation techniques - 703 00:42:49,880 --> 00:42:52,080 some of them way ahead of their time. 704 00:42:54,600 --> 00:42:57,400 There was an artefact found in Greenland 705 00:42:57,400 --> 00:42:59,520 on a Viking settlement there, 706 00:42:59,520 --> 00:43:01,360 it's a sundial compass. 707 00:43:01,360 --> 00:43:04,080 This is a replica of the compass found on the island 708 00:43:04,080 --> 00:43:05,880 of Uunartoq in Greenland. 709 00:43:05,880 --> 00:43:10,200 When the noonday sun casts a shadow onto the line, it gives a bearing. 710 00:43:11,720 --> 00:43:16,880 So, I just spin the disk until the shadow touches the line 711 00:43:16,880 --> 00:43:19,400 - and now I know where north and south is. - Really? - Yeah. 712 00:43:19,400 --> 00:43:22,080 - So, that's north, there? - Yeah. - And that's accurate? - Yes. 713 00:43:22,080 --> 00:43:24,080 We actually used this very instrument to sail 714 00:43:24,080 --> 00:43:26,320 from Denmark to Edinburgh in Scotland 715 00:43:26,320 --> 00:43:28,520 and we were three degrees off when we got there. 716 00:43:28,520 --> 00:43:30,640 - You found Edinburgh? - Mm. - That's good going. 717 00:43:30,640 --> 00:43:33,440 Do you know are there any other tools that they would have used? 718 00:43:33,440 --> 00:43:37,400 There's a description in some of the sagas about a sunstone - 719 00:43:37,400 --> 00:43:39,600 a sort of an almost magical sunstone - 720 00:43:39,600 --> 00:43:42,760 that even though it was overcast you could find the directions of the sun 721 00:43:42,760 --> 00:43:45,400 and we've tried out different natural stones 722 00:43:45,400 --> 00:43:49,280 and one of them that we've tried is Icelandic feldspar. 723 00:43:49,280 --> 00:43:52,040 The crystal allows you to see the sun 724 00:43:52,040 --> 00:43:54,280 even when it's hidden behind a cloud. 725 00:43:54,280 --> 00:43:57,200 And if you look straight up through it, you see that the marker 726 00:43:57,200 --> 00:43:58,600 actually makes two shadows. 727 00:43:58,600 --> 00:44:01,320 Then when they have the same grey shadow, then that's... 728 00:44:01,320 --> 00:44:03,000 Then you're pointing right at the sun. 729 00:44:03,000 --> 00:44:05,320 ..then you're pointing this side straight to the sun. 730 00:44:11,640 --> 00:44:15,280 Spending time on this replica Viking ship has opened my eyes. 731 00:44:15,280 --> 00:44:17,400 It has taught me a huge amount. 732 00:44:17,400 --> 00:44:19,760 They were masters, not just of sailing, 733 00:44:19,760 --> 00:44:22,000 but of navigation, as well. 734 00:44:22,000 --> 00:44:24,280 I'm not surprised they could find these islands 735 00:44:24,280 --> 00:44:26,360 in the middle of the North Atlantic. 736 00:44:28,120 --> 00:44:32,320 By the end of the 9th century, the Vikings had voyaged as far west 737 00:44:32,320 --> 00:44:34,080 as any European. 738 00:44:37,160 --> 00:44:39,360 Just as they were settling in York, 739 00:44:39,360 --> 00:44:42,720 other Viking pioneers were arriving in a new land. 740 00:44:45,320 --> 00:44:46,760 Iceland. 741 00:44:51,480 --> 00:44:54,360 And it's where Sarah and I are meeting up again 742 00:44:54,360 --> 00:44:56,280 for the next stage of the quest. 743 00:44:59,760 --> 00:45:03,160 SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 744 00:45:06,920 --> 00:45:09,360 According to the Old Norse sagas, 745 00:45:09,360 --> 00:45:12,160 the most famous settler, Erik the Red, 746 00:45:12,160 --> 00:45:16,480 arrived here after he was banished from Norway for murder. 747 00:45:16,480 --> 00:45:19,400 But most of the immigrants came for another reason - 748 00:45:19,400 --> 00:45:21,120 land. 749 00:45:21,120 --> 00:45:24,000 This astonishing story of frontier pioneers 750 00:45:24,000 --> 00:45:26,720 has a surprising British twist. 751 00:45:26,720 --> 00:45:30,040 Recently, geneticist Dr Kari Stefansson 752 00:45:30,040 --> 00:45:33,840 looked into the origins of the Icelandic settlers. 753 00:45:35,360 --> 00:45:38,280 There is a book written about 1,000 years ago 754 00:45:38,280 --> 00:45:40,120 called the Book of Settlement 755 00:45:40,120 --> 00:45:43,320 and it says that Iceland was settled by Norwegian Vikings 756 00:45:43,320 --> 00:45:45,200 who stopped by in the British Isles, 757 00:45:45,200 --> 00:45:47,880 picked up slaves and went up to Iceland. 758 00:45:47,880 --> 00:45:51,520 So, we decided to examine that story. 759 00:45:53,200 --> 00:45:54,840 He traced inherited DNA 760 00:45:54,840 --> 00:45:59,360 to show that three-quarters of men were of Norwegian origin, 761 00:45:59,360 --> 00:46:03,560 but that two-thirds of women were from the British Isles. 762 00:46:05,640 --> 00:46:08,560 So, it looks like Iceland was settled by Norwegian boys 763 00:46:08,560 --> 00:46:10,320 who stopped by in British Isles, 764 00:46:10,320 --> 00:46:14,320 picked up women and went up to Iceland and settled down. 765 00:46:14,320 --> 00:46:16,120 Last time, when I went to England, 766 00:46:16,120 --> 00:46:19,320 it looked to me like they took all the pretty women with them. 767 00:46:19,320 --> 00:46:21,200 THEY LAUGH 768 00:46:21,200 --> 00:46:24,840 - So, most of the men who came here were Norwegian. - Yes. 769 00:46:24,840 --> 00:46:26,920 What about the other men? Who were they? 770 00:46:26,920 --> 00:46:31,040 They were probably slaves that were caught in Britain. 771 00:46:31,040 --> 00:46:33,120 So, even more British and Irish. 772 00:46:33,120 --> 00:46:34,440 Amazing. 773 00:46:34,440 --> 00:46:36,920 So, there are important ties of kinship 774 00:46:36,920 --> 00:46:40,880 - between modern British and Irish people and Icelanders. - Yes. 775 00:46:40,880 --> 00:46:42,560 As much as I hate to admit it, 776 00:46:42,560 --> 00:46:45,440 we are probably the same species as the British. 777 00:46:45,440 --> 00:46:48,840 Lucky you! Intrepid, maritime, 778 00:46:48,840 --> 00:46:50,560 tough, 779 00:46:50,560 --> 00:46:52,000 tall. 780 00:46:57,120 --> 00:47:01,160 So, if the sagas are right, are the satellites, too? 781 00:47:02,320 --> 00:47:05,840 It's time to test out whether the tiny turf structures 782 00:47:05,840 --> 00:47:09,640 Sarah thinks she spotted from space are really there. 783 00:47:11,840 --> 00:47:14,160 But you're pretty sure there will be something here? 784 00:47:14,160 --> 00:47:17,240 We've found what look like a number of potential features, 785 00:47:17,240 --> 00:47:18,920 one possible farm. 786 00:47:18,920 --> 00:47:21,760 Is it Norse? Is it something else? Is it ANYTHING? 787 00:47:27,320 --> 00:47:29,280 If this doesn't work... 788 00:47:29,280 --> 00:47:32,080 well, we're not going to find anything in North America, are we? 789 00:47:32,080 --> 00:47:33,840 We're not going to have a leg to stand on. 790 00:47:33,840 --> 00:47:35,560 You have to deliver North America. 791 00:47:35,560 --> 00:47:38,400 Come on, that's why we're here. That would be so exciting. 792 00:47:43,120 --> 00:47:47,040 We're joining Doug Bolender and his colleague Gudny Zoega 793 00:47:47,040 --> 00:47:49,840 at their site in Hegranes, North Iceland. 794 00:47:52,160 --> 00:47:55,600 This is the spot Sarah identified in the satellite imagery. 795 00:47:57,200 --> 00:48:00,920 Does this field really hide a settlement? 796 00:48:02,000 --> 00:48:04,240 - Would you like the honours? - I would love to. 797 00:48:04,240 --> 00:48:07,120 We are taking core samples to look for turf building blocks 798 00:48:07,120 --> 00:48:08,520 under the surface. 799 00:48:08,520 --> 00:48:10,400 I got it, Dan. 800 00:48:10,400 --> 00:48:13,520 The Once and Future King! 801 00:48:13,520 --> 00:48:14,600 Yay! 802 00:48:14,600 --> 00:48:19,200 The turf blocks often contain telltale layers of volcanic ash. 803 00:48:19,200 --> 00:48:20,600 Ooh! 804 00:48:20,600 --> 00:48:23,560 I'm seeing some white there. 805 00:48:23,560 --> 00:48:25,480 Yeah, you are seeing some white here. 806 00:48:25,480 --> 00:48:27,800 So, we have more tephra in this. 807 00:48:27,800 --> 00:48:30,720 - So, this is volcanic ash here? - Yeah. - Yeah. 808 00:48:31,760 --> 00:48:34,720 Each of these thin layers gives an accurate age. 809 00:48:37,720 --> 00:48:42,200 Every Icelandic volcanic eruption can be precisely dated. 810 00:48:44,520 --> 00:48:46,200 So, what we're seeing here 811 00:48:46,200 --> 00:48:49,800 is that we have a little bit of the white tephra from 1104 AD, 812 00:48:49,800 --> 00:48:51,480 and then underneath of it, 813 00:48:51,480 --> 00:48:55,040 we have this darker grey or blackish tephra, 814 00:48:55,040 --> 00:48:58,520 - which in all likelihood is from 1300 AD. - OK. 815 00:48:58,520 --> 00:49:01,000 But you can see immediately those are in the wrong order. 816 00:49:01,000 --> 00:49:05,160 Here we have 1104 on top of 1300. 817 00:49:05,160 --> 00:49:07,960 So, this is one of those certain signs that what we are seeing 818 00:49:07,960 --> 00:49:11,040 is some piece of turf that somebody flipped over 819 00:49:11,040 --> 00:49:13,800 when they were building the building. 820 00:49:13,800 --> 00:49:17,280 So, even though you can't see this on the surface at all here, 821 00:49:17,280 --> 00:49:22,120 - the turf itself is just under the surface about ten centimetres. - OK. 822 00:49:22,120 --> 00:49:25,400 So, it's definitely affecting the plants that are on the surface. 823 00:49:25,400 --> 00:49:29,800 So, this little layer of turf down here is affecting the plants 824 00:49:29,800 --> 00:49:32,280 on the surface and that's visible from space? 825 00:49:32,280 --> 00:49:34,320 400 miles in space. 826 00:49:34,320 --> 00:49:36,400 - It's amazing. - That's really crazy. 827 00:49:36,400 --> 00:49:37,840 THEY LAUGH 828 00:49:40,200 --> 00:49:44,040 To show Sarah what one of the buried turf walls actually looks like, 829 00:49:44,040 --> 00:49:46,600 the team has already started digging one up. 830 00:49:48,200 --> 00:49:49,840 What is going on here? 831 00:49:49,840 --> 00:49:53,520 Here, in the middle of it, we actually have a wall feature, 832 00:49:53,520 --> 00:49:56,560 which you indicated on your satellite. 833 00:49:56,560 --> 00:49:58,080 So, she is completely right. 834 00:49:58,080 --> 00:50:00,200 The satellites are right. They delivered. 835 00:50:00,200 --> 00:50:02,400 Yes. On this one, they sure did. 836 00:50:02,400 --> 00:50:06,360 A section cut within the wall offers further clues. 837 00:50:07,520 --> 00:50:11,440 You can see the striations of the turf in here. 838 00:50:11,440 --> 00:50:15,440 It will be a useful guide for Sarah to look for in North America. 839 00:50:15,440 --> 00:50:18,520 So, this is Sarah's wall? Is that exciting, Sarah? 840 00:50:18,520 --> 00:50:23,560 It's cool to learn that satellites can be used in a completely new area 841 00:50:23,560 --> 00:50:25,280 to find things much smaller - 842 00:50:25,280 --> 00:50:29,000 and here, too, we're dealing with about 15 centimetres. 843 00:50:29,000 --> 00:50:32,920 But this wall is dense enough to affect the overlying vegetation, 844 00:50:32,920 --> 00:50:34,600 so it can be detected from space. 845 00:50:34,600 --> 00:50:36,720 So, that's a really cool thing to learn. 846 00:50:40,240 --> 00:50:41,960 But it's not just this trench 847 00:50:41,960 --> 00:50:44,960 that has come up with evidence of human activity. 848 00:50:44,960 --> 00:50:50,080 Every flag shows a turf structure that Sarah spotted from space... 849 00:50:50,080 --> 00:50:54,320 and every blob shows a buried building beneath the surface. 850 00:51:00,120 --> 00:51:05,320 Here, at this site, in this vast landscape, we've had a big win. 851 00:51:05,320 --> 00:51:10,200 We know satellite imagery works here and that makes me wonder 852 00:51:10,200 --> 00:51:12,520 what's left to find in North America. 853 00:51:17,760 --> 00:51:21,200 The other key to unlocking the secrets of Sarah's new site 854 00:51:21,200 --> 00:51:25,520 is evidence of metalworking, just like at L'Anse aux Meadows, 855 00:51:25,520 --> 00:51:28,320 the most westerly settlement discovered so far. 856 00:51:31,560 --> 00:51:35,040 So, we're both going to take a crash course in what to look for. 857 00:51:50,320 --> 00:51:54,080 Master blacksmith Jonas Bigler is going to show me how the Vikings 858 00:51:54,080 --> 00:51:56,440 made nails to repair their boats. 859 00:52:05,240 --> 00:52:07,000 Do you think I can try and make a nail? 860 00:52:07,000 --> 00:52:08,200 I'm sure you can. 861 00:52:08,200 --> 00:52:09,720 OK, let's try it. 862 00:52:09,720 --> 00:52:12,080 Wherever the Vikings went they needed nails 863 00:52:12,080 --> 00:52:13,760 to make repairs to their ships. 864 00:52:13,760 --> 00:52:17,840 Without them, their expansion would never have been possible. 865 00:52:18,840 --> 00:52:20,800 - Bit more charcoal on? - Yeah. 866 00:52:22,880 --> 00:52:24,640 OK, here we go. 867 00:52:28,120 --> 00:52:32,000 - OK, how's this? - It's great! - OK, here we go. 868 00:52:38,600 --> 00:52:42,160 An ocean-going ship needed 4,000 nails, 869 00:52:42,160 --> 00:52:45,280 and that required ten tonnes of iron ore 870 00:52:45,280 --> 00:52:48,920 from a source known to the Vikings as bog iron. 871 00:52:51,960 --> 00:52:54,920 While I grapple with hot metal, Sarah is exploring 872 00:52:54,920 --> 00:52:57,400 the kind of evidence for Viking metalworking 873 00:52:57,400 --> 00:52:59,240 that she might find in America. 874 00:53:01,720 --> 00:53:05,920 - So, here we have a bucket of the actual iron ore. - Yeah. 875 00:53:05,920 --> 00:53:07,760 Bog iron. 876 00:53:07,760 --> 00:53:09,440 It's really crumbly. 877 00:53:09,440 --> 00:53:11,720 It's full of impurities, basically. 878 00:53:11,720 --> 00:53:15,840 And this is then roasted to extract any impurities 879 00:53:15,840 --> 00:53:18,400 to get better iron from the ore. 880 00:53:18,400 --> 00:53:21,840 Once roasted, the purified ore would be placed in a furnace 881 00:53:21,840 --> 00:53:26,960 to drive off even more impurities, producing refined iron 882 00:53:26,960 --> 00:53:29,280 and the waste product, slag. 883 00:53:29,280 --> 00:53:31,840 So, here you have the type of slag you get 884 00:53:31,840 --> 00:53:33,960 at the bottom of the furnace. 885 00:53:33,960 --> 00:53:36,000 If you have a smithy at the site, 886 00:53:36,000 --> 00:53:38,680 this is actually what you might find from the hearth. 887 00:53:38,680 --> 00:53:41,840 I don't know if we'll get that lucky this season - but one can hope. 888 00:53:41,840 --> 00:53:43,760 One can hope. Well... 889 00:53:43,760 --> 00:53:46,560 - This here is the hammer scale... - OK. 890 00:53:46,560 --> 00:53:49,880 ..and this is what you would find around a blacksmith's anvil, 891 00:53:49,880 --> 00:53:52,680 where they actually work the iron. 892 00:53:52,680 --> 00:53:57,400 And you can test it to see the iron content of it. 893 00:53:57,400 --> 00:54:00,040 - Oh, yeah. Look, it just jumps right on. - Yeah, yeah. 894 00:54:00,040 --> 00:54:02,960 But even at these home-smelting sites for a single farm, 895 00:54:02,960 --> 00:54:06,640 you get a large amount of slag and by-products. 896 00:54:09,840 --> 00:54:14,160 Oh, I can really feel it in the old shoulder already. 897 00:54:14,160 --> 00:54:18,120 A master blacksmith could make a nail in under a minute. 898 00:54:20,280 --> 00:54:22,920 - How are we looking? - It's better. 899 00:54:22,920 --> 00:54:25,200 I'm ten minutes in. 900 00:54:29,120 --> 00:54:31,640 There we go, look at that! 901 00:54:31,640 --> 00:54:34,200 Now, the all-important head of the nail. 902 00:54:38,640 --> 00:54:41,000 It's not the best nail I've ever seen in my life. 903 00:54:41,000 --> 00:54:42,600 You've just started. 904 00:54:42,600 --> 00:54:44,160 THEY LAUGH 905 00:54:44,160 --> 00:54:46,280 Compare it here. 906 00:54:46,280 --> 00:54:48,440 That's what supposed to look like! 907 00:54:52,680 --> 00:54:54,240 It has been so incredibly helpful, 908 00:54:54,240 --> 00:54:57,160 because I've gotten to see all the materials 909 00:54:57,160 --> 00:54:59,600 that would go into iron production. 910 00:54:59,600 --> 00:55:01,400 That may help me in my search 911 00:55:01,400 --> 00:55:04,200 for a possible Norse site in North America. 912 00:55:05,880 --> 00:55:09,400 SAGA IS SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 913 00:55:14,120 --> 00:55:17,320 Before we leave Iceland, I need to find out what prompted 914 00:55:17,320 --> 00:55:20,960 the next step in the Vikings' epic journey west. 915 00:55:20,960 --> 00:55:23,440 OLD NORSE CONTINUES 916 00:55:28,240 --> 00:55:31,800 This amazing gorge is the site of Thingvellir, 917 00:55:31,800 --> 00:55:34,760 Iceland's open-air Viking parliament. 918 00:55:35,840 --> 00:55:39,240 I'm meeting up again with saga expert Dr Emily Lethbridge. 919 00:55:41,840 --> 00:55:44,960 This is the site of oldest parliament in the world. 920 00:55:44,960 --> 00:55:46,360 Would they meet in this ravine 921 00:55:46,360 --> 00:55:48,720 because it's like a parliament chamber, almost? 922 00:55:48,720 --> 00:55:50,320 The sound bounces off the sides. 923 00:55:50,320 --> 00:55:54,160 It is an extraordinary natural amphitheatre. 924 00:55:54,160 --> 00:55:56,440 And there's great acoustics. 925 00:55:56,440 --> 00:55:58,760 OLD NORSE IS SPOKEN 926 00:56:00,560 --> 00:56:04,080 It isn't just the acoustics that make this place special. 927 00:56:05,600 --> 00:56:10,720 This is a natural fault line. We are on the point where the two plates - 928 00:56:10,720 --> 00:56:15,000 - the North American and the Eurasian tectonic plates meet. - You're joking! 929 00:56:15,000 --> 00:56:17,840 - So, this is the fault between the two of them? - This is the fault line. 930 00:56:17,840 --> 00:56:20,560 So, you and I are standing in between Eurasia and North America 931 00:56:20,560 --> 00:56:22,680 - at the moment. - We are. One foot on two continents. 932 00:56:22,680 --> 00:56:26,040 Isn't that amazing, that the Vikings who were the first Eurasians 933 00:56:26,040 --> 00:56:29,200 to explore North America, ended up having one of their parliaments 934 00:56:29,200 --> 00:56:31,320 on the actual divide between the two? 935 00:56:33,640 --> 00:56:39,240 Each year in June, chieftains from across Iceland would gather here. 936 00:56:39,240 --> 00:56:42,480 I guess people think of the Vikings as a bit violent, a bit chaotic - 937 00:56:42,480 --> 00:56:45,200 - in fact, this is very sophisticated. - Yeah. 938 00:56:45,200 --> 00:56:47,560 What kind of things would be discussed and debated 939 00:56:47,560 --> 00:56:49,280 at these parliaments? 940 00:56:49,280 --> 00:56:54,880 Sentences of outlawry would be imposed on members of society 941 00:56:54,880 --> 00:56:58,080 - who had broken all of the rules. - You were sent away from Iceland? 942 00:56:58,080 --> 00:57:01,200 You could go anywhere else, but you couldn't set foot on Iceland 943 00:57:01,200 --> 00:57:03,480 for the period that the outlawry stood. 944 00:57:04,640 --> 00:57:08,040 And it was exile that launched the most astonishing chapter 945 00:57:08,040 --> 00:57:09,840 in Viking exploration. 946 00:57:11,560 --> 00:57:15,240 According to the sagas, in 982 AD, 947 00:57:15,240 --> 00:57:20,360 the murderer Erik the Red was banished again. 948 00:57:20,360 --> 00:57:25,640 Erik the Red was the first Icelander to discover Greenland 949 00:57:25,640 --> 00:57:28,120 and then make a permanent settlement there. 950 00:57:28,120 --> 00:57:30,600 So, because he had been thrown out of everywhere else, 951 00:57:30,600 --> 00:57:32,880 he decided to start his own colony somewhere. 952 00:57:32,880 --> 00:57:35,240 They were people who took chances 953 00:57:35,240 --> 00:57:39,840 and were prepared to undergo huge physical trials, 954 00:57:39,840 --> 00:57:43,000 such as sailing in open boats across the Atlantic, 955 00:57:43,000 --> 00:57:44,720 to see what they could find. 956 00:57:49,600 --> 00:57:51,320 It was the adventurous, 957 00:57:51,320 --> 00:57:55,320 entrepreneurial spirit of these people that drove them on. 958 00:57:56,440 --> 00:58:02,040 Erik the Red turned the shattering blow of exile into an opportunity. 959 00:58:04,120 --> 00:58:06,760 It's time for me to head to Greenland 960 00:58:06,760 --> 00:58:10,360 in the footsteps, once again, of Erik the Red 961 00:58:10,360 --> 00:58:15,320 and for Sarah to finally join her team in North America. 962 00:58:20,120 --> 00:58:24,360 I am walking to Point Rosee for the first time 963 00:58:24,360 --> 00:58:28,960 after many, many months of looking at satellite imagery. 964 00:58:31,080 --> 00:58:34,040 At last, the news finally arrives. 965 00:58:34,040 --> 00:58:36,840 Sarah has permission to dig for just two weeks 966 00:58:36,840 --> 00:58:38,480 at the site in Newfoundland. 967 00:58:40,160 --> 00:58:43,600 I really had no idea it would be this dramatic. 968 00:58:43,600 --> 00:58:45,680 Absolutely no idea, at all. 969 00:58:48,160 --> 00:58:52,000 The search for the Vikings is about to reach its climax. 970 00:58:53,640 --> 00:58:58,080 Will all the effort, the hunting along thousands of miles of coast, 971 00:58:58,080 --> 00:59:00,480 the surveying at the new site 972 00:59:00,480 --> 00:59:03,800 and the successes in Scotland and Iceland, 973 00:59:03,800 --> 00:59:06,360 bear fruit at Point Rosee? 974 00:59:09,600 --> 00:59:15,120 Will the faint lines on an image taken from 383 miles above the Earth 975 00:59:15,120 --> 00:59:19,040 prove to be the most westerly Viking settlement ever discovered? 976 00:59:20,920 --> 00:59:23,280 SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 977 00:59:25,520 --> 00:59:31,560 Could this be where Leif Erikson beached his ships 1,000 years ago? 978 00:59:31,560 --> 00:59:34,240 OLD NORSE CONTINUES 979 00:59:37,600 --> 00:59:39,600 This is going to be fun. 980 00:59:39,600 --> 00:59:41,080 Here we go. 981 00:59:53,000 --> 00:59:57,360 After three days of digging, they have yet to find anything. 982 00:59:57,360 --> 01:00:01,160 They're focusing on a spot within the L-shaped structure 983 01:00:01,160 --> 01:00:02,800 on the satellite image. 984 01:00:04,600 --> 01:00:07,560 Sarah thinks it looks similar to one of the buildings 985 01:00:07,560 --> 01:00:09,640 at L'Anse aux Meadows... 986 01:00:09,640 --> 01:00:11,920 Pretty brutal. 987 01:00:11,920 --> 01:00:15,280 Oh, yeah. Looks like there's a whole layer of it down below. 988 01:00:19,360 --> 01:00:21,840 ..but a few centimetres below the surface, 989 01:00:21,840 --> 01:00:23,480 they think they've found something. 990 01:00:23,480 --> 01:00:24,840 Ooh! 991 01:00:26,560 --> 01:00:28,000 It's sand. 992 01:00:28,000 --> 01:00:30,360 It's very sandy, it's yellowish grey. 993 01:00:31,880 --> 01:00:33,760 It's not a man-made deposit. 994 01:00:35,360 --> 01:00:38,120 It's painstaking and frustrating work, 995 01:00:38,120 --> 01:00:39,960 with only two weeks to dig. 996 01:00:42,360 --> 01:00:45,600 SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 997 01:00:45,600 --> 01:00:49,400 While Sarah searches for the most westerly Viking expansion, 998 01:00:49,400 --> 01:00:53,400 I'm tracking pioneer bad boy Erik the Red in the most remote 999 01:00:53,400 --> 01:00:55,480 of all the Viking colonies. 1000 01:00:57,440 --> 01:01:01,560 Greenland - the last stop before North America - 1001 01:01:01,560 --> 01:01:04,640 was a Viking homeland for 500 years. 1002 01:01:06,200 --> 01:01:09,040 Erik is supposed to have named it Greenland 1003 01:01:09,040 --> 01:01:11,400 to make it attractive to colonists, 1004 01:01:11,400 --> 01:01:13,600 even though it's covered in ice. 1005 01:01:13,600 --> 01:01:17,800 These icebergs look beautiful but they are a major danger to shipping, 1006 01:01:17,800 --> 01:01:19,880 just as they were back in Viking times - 1007 01:01:19,880 --> 01:01:22,240 and they're a very obvious reminder 1008 01:01:22,240 --> 01:01:26,360 that this water is absolutely icy cold. 1009 01:01:26,360 --> 01:01:28,680 If I fell in there without this suit on, 1010 01:01:28,680 --> 01:01:32,440 my life expectancy would be... a few minutes, at best. 1011 01:01:47,080 --> 01:01:49,840 I'm joining Christian Madsen and his team 1012 01:01:49,840 --> 01:01:52,960 searching for the most remote lost Viking sites 1013 01:01:52,960 --> 01:01:55,600 in the Uunartoq Fjord of South Greenland. 1014 01:01:57,840 --> 01:01:59,880 - Turn off the engine. - OK. 1015 01:01:59,880 --> 01:02:01,720 I'm ready. 1016 01:02:08,920 --> 01:02:13,560 This valley was noted as a potential Viking site 80 years ago. 1017 01:02:17,400 --> 01:02:19,200 No-one has been back since - 1018 01:02:19,200 --> 01:02:21,520 but today we're stepping out again. 1019 01:02:22,720 --> 01:02:25,520 Look, there. There you have the first ruin. 1020 01:02:25,520 --> 01:02:28,360 - That's a ruin there? - Yes, so now we know we are on the right side, 1021 01:02:28,360 --> 01:02:29,920 at least. That's a good thing. 1022 01:02:29,920 --> 01:02:32,400 - Is this it? You think this a site? - Yes, this is a site. 1023 01:02:32,400 --> 01:02:34,280 Now we just need to find the farmhouse. 1024 01:02:34,280 --> 01:02:37,600 We've discovered a Viking settlement site! That's very exciting. 1025 01:02:37,600 --> 01:02:39,600 It's in a very dramatic place, as well. 1026 01:02:39,600 --> 01:02:42,600 - It's an amazing setting, isn't it? - Yeah. 1027 01:02:42,600 --> 01:02:46,200 You can imagine that huge cliff face staring down... 1028 01:02:47,840 --> 01:02:50,840 - You see all the stones sticking up at the surface? - Yeah. 1029 01:02:50,840 --> 01:02:53,000 That is building stones for the rooms, 1030 01:02:53,000 --> 01:02:54,920 so I think we have a farmhouse. 1031 01:02:54,920 --> 01:02:56,640 It looks massive. 1032 01:03:01,080 --> 01:03:02,760 It's the most fantastic thing, 1033 01:03:02,760 --> 01:03:05,240 coming to a new site, finding all the ruins. 1034 01:03:05,240 --> 01:03:07,560 You never know what you're going to find, 1035 01:03:07,560 --> 01:03:09,640 so it's always a big surprise for us. 1036 01:03:13,840 --> 01:03:16,400 Well, there's some darker soil here, now. 1037 01:03:16,400 --> 01:03:19,280 In order to date when the Vikings were actually here, 1038 01:03:19,280 --> 01:03:21,840 I'm gathering tiny flecks of charcoal, 1039 01:03:21,840 --> 01:03:26,480 from perhaps 1,000 years ago, with soil scientist Ian Simpson. 1040 01:03:28,240 --> 01:03:32,320 Funny life you lead, Ian. Because you spend a few months of the year 1041 01:03:32,320 --> 01:03:35,920 in the world's most remote and harshest landscapes 1042 01:03:35,920 --> 01:03:39,040 and the rest of the time in a lab back in Stirling 1043 01:03:39,040 --> 01:03:40,680 examining the results. 1044 01:03:40,680 --> 01:03:41,920 Yeah, I mean, it's great. 1045 01:03:41,920 --> 01:03:45,360 You've actually got a small piece of Viking history here in this tin - 1046 01:03:45,360 --> 01:03:48,960 - and that's what keeps you going through the winter! - Yeah. 1047 01:03:50,160 --> 01:03:54,520 I'm getting into this, despite midges the size of Viking longships. 1048 01:03:55,680 --> 01:03:58,720 Hold on - a big piece. 1049 01:03:58,720 --> 01:04:01,080 Oh, yeah. Where did that come from?! 1050 01:04:01,080 --> 01:04:05,320 - Well, that... - Look what he has found, this guy is good. 1051 01:04:05,320 --> 01:04:07,920 Brilliant - and that's easily datable. 1052 01:04:07,920 --> 01:04:10,800 - The carbon lab will be very pleased with that. - Oh good, I'm glad. 1053 01:04:10,800 --> 01:04:14,040 - We can work with that. - That's very exciting. 1054 01:04:14,040 --> 01:04:16,600 According to these guys, it is one of the most remote 1055 01:04:16,600 --> 01:04:17,840 Viking settlement sites 1056 01:04:17,840 --> 01:04:20,280 that have ever been found anywhere in Greenland 1057 01:04:20,280 --> 01:04:22,400 and to be here with them is so exciting, 1058 01:04:22,400 --> 01:04:24,720 as they are able to confirm this was a Viking site. 1059 01:04:24,720 --> 01:04:27,600 Just in the last few minutes, we - this small team - 1060 01:04:27,600 --> 01:04:29,200 has been able to add something 1061 01:04:29,200 --> 01:04:32,560 to the world's understanding of the Vikings. 1062 01:04:35,520 --> 01:04:38,320 We retire to our camp on Uunartoq Island, 1063 01:04:38,320 --> 01:04:41,480 the very place where the sundial compass was found 1064 01:04:41,480 --> 01:04:43,800 that might have led the Vikings here. 1065 01:04:53,240 --> 01:04:57,080 The northern lights are one of the treasures of the Arctic 1066 01:04:57,080 --> 01:05:01,040 but it was another highly prized treasure - walrus ivory - 1067 01:05:01,040 --> 01:05:05,920 that drew the Viking pioneers to settle in such a remote place. 1068 01:05:05,920 --> 01:05:08,920 Almost had an inexhaustible population of walrus, 1069 01:05:08,920 --> 01:05:13,480 so, maybe this colonisation was spearheaded by this sort of industry 1070 01:05:13,480 --> 01:05:15,920 that was aimed at European markets to begin with. 1071 01:05:15,920 --> 01:05:19,320 We are perhaps seeing quite determined hunters 1072 01:05:19,320 --> 01:05:22,040 and exploiters of natural resources. 1073 01:05:24,560 --> 01:05:29,240 So, they weren't just desperate men on the fringes of civilisation? 1074 01:05:29,240 --> 01:05:31,040 They were definitely entrepreneurs. 1075 01:05:31,040 --> 01:05:34,280 They knew exactly what they were doing and what they were going for, 1076 01:05:34,280 --> 01:05:38,040 and they settled all the best places from the beginning, it seems. 1077 01:05:40,040 --> 01:05:43,000 These Viking adventurers weren't impoverished farmers 1078 01:05:43,000 --> 01:05:44,840 at the edge of the world, 1079 01:05:44,840 --> 01:05:47,640 more like the pioneers of the American West, 1080 01:05:47,640 --> 01:05:50,120 constantly pushing the frontier forward. 1081 01:05:58,200 --> 01:06:00,200 It's eight days into the dig 1082 01:06:00,200 --> 01:06:03,240 for Sarah and HER pioneers over in America - 1083 01:06:03,240 --> 01:06:06,560 and they may finally have made a breakthrough. 1084 01:06:06,560 --> 01:06:08,560 Oh, that's a good sign. 1085 01:06:09,640 --> 01:06:13,840 Her colleague, Fred Schwarz, thinks he's found signs of human activity 1086 01:06:13,840 --> 01:06:17,560 inside the feature Sarah spotted from space. 1087 01:06:17,560 --> 01:06:19,720 Well, it's interesting. 1088 01:06:19,720 --> 01:06:23,440 We have quite a large boulder. It's cracked. 1089 01:06:23,440 --> 01:06:26,360 It's quite possible that it's fire cracked, 1090 01:06:26,360 --> 01:06:30,360 and it takes a pretty serious amount of heat 1091 01:06:30,360 --> 01:06:33,080 to crack a boulder this size. 1092 01:06:34,600 --> 01:06:37,000 Could it be evidence for metalworking? 1093 01:06:41,840 --> 01:06:45,400 Then Sarah finds what looks like a man-made fragment. 1094 01:06:46,680 --> 01:06:51,880 So, this looks like metalworking by-product - the head of a nail. 1095 01:06:53,040 --> 01:06:55,920 Hopefully, the first of many, many things we find. 1096 01:06:59,200 --> 01:07:02,880 This looks like typical Norse nails... 1097 01:07:04,800 --> 01:07:06,680 ..and we've found this just now. 1098 01:07:07,920 --> 01:07:09,760 That's awesome. 1099 01:07:12,320 --> 01:07:14,760 That's classic slag 1100 01:07:14,760 --> 01:07:18,360 and what slag is, is a by-product of metal production... 1101 01:07:19,520 --> 01:07:24,800 ..and there's dense amounts of metal and evidence of fire that's there. 1102 01:07:24,800 --> 01:07:27,120 So... 1103 01:07:27,120 --> 01:07:32,640 indigenous peoples here did not produce metal, 1104 01:07:32,640 --> 01:07:34,800 and now we have metal production. 1105 01:07:34,800 --> 01:07:37,160 This is a very good day indeed! 1106 01:07:41,000 --> 01:07:44,360 Day nine, and the ground keeps giving. 1107 01:07:45,840 --> 01:07:48,080 This thing... 1108 01:07:48,080 --> 01:07:51,360 which looks like an object as it was coming out of the ground, 1109 01:07:51,360 --> 01:07:53,400 is actually copper slag. 1110 01:07:53,400 --> 01:07:58,840 You've got copper pieces and little bits of iron inside it. 1111 01:07:58,840 --> 01:08:00,840 So, this is very, very heavy. 1112 01:08:04,240 --> 01:08:07,040 Within a few days, they have up to eight kilos 1113 01:08:07,040 --> 01:08:10,760 of what they think is metalworking by-product - 1114 01:08:10,760 --> 01:08:12,840 slag or bog iron. 1115 01:08:14,800 --> 01:08:17,640 It needs to be confirmed by experts 1116 01:08:17,640 --> 01:08:21,520 and it's not the only potential evidence turning up. 1117 01:08:21,520 --> 01:08:22,840 Oh! 1118 01:08:22,840 --> 01:08:25,640 They're even finding organic material. 1119 01:08:26,840 --> 01:08:28,840 It's a good sign that it's floating. 1120 01:08:28,840 --> 01:08:30,600 It's hard on the outside - 1121 01:08:30,600 --> 01:08:32,320 looks like a seed. 1122 01:08:32,320 --> 01:08:33,680 So, if this is a seed, 1123 01:08:33,680 --> 01:08:37,760 it's our first thing that we could do radiocarbon dating. 1124 01:08:42,000 --> 01:08:44,400 It looks charred. 1125 01:08:44,400 --> 01:08:48,160 The seed might just provide an all-important date for the site 1126 01:08:48,160 --> 01:08:49,920 that matches the Viking era. 1127 01:08:57,960 --> 01:09:02,920 With the emergence of these finds, Sarah is calling in reinforcements. 1128 01:09:02,920 --> 01:09:05,920 SAGA SPOKEN IN OLD NORSE 1129 01:09:10,680 --> 01:09:14,480 I'm still stalking Erik the Red's son Leif. 1130 01:09:14,480 --> 01:09:17,200 According to the sagas, around 1000 AD, 1131 01:09:17,200 --> 01:09:19,560 he blazed a trail through America. 1132 01:09:19,560 --> 01:09:21,040 But where did he go? 1133 01:09:21,040 --> 01:09:26,080 I'm joining Sarah in Newfoundland hopefully to find out. 1134 01:09:26,080 --> 01:09:27,800 It's so exciting. 1135 01:09:27,800 --> 01:09:31,240 Traversing hundreds of miles of this beautiful wilderness, 1136 01:09:31,240 --> 01:09:33,320 getting ever closer to Sarah and her site - 1137 01:09:33,320 --> 01:09:35,400 the excitement's really building. 1138 01:09:36,400 --> 01:09:38,560 No turf walls have turned up yet, 1139 01:09:38,560 --> 01:09:41,280 but the metalworking finds keep coming. 1140 01:09:43,080 --> 01:09:45,000 If it's what Sarah thinks it is 1141 01:09:45,000 --> 01:09:47,040 and there is evidence of Viking occupation, 1142 01:09:47,040 --> 01:09:49,360 well, I think it'll be one of the most important 1143 01:09:49,360 --> 01:09:52,080 archaeological discoveries this century - 1144 01:09:52,080 --> 01:09:56,400 and it is amazing, it's wonderful just to be playing a very small part 1145 01:09:56,400 --> 01:09:58,480 in this story. I feel really lucky. 1146 01:10:03,360 --> 01:10:05,760 Is the evidence enough to prove that Sarah's dig 1147 01:10:05,760 --> 01:10:09,320 is the most westerly Viking site ever to be discovered? 1148 01:10:12,080 --> 01:10:14,200 Sarah isn't a Viking expert, 1149 01:10:14,200 --> 01:10:18,360 so Dr Doug Bolender is also on his way to assess the finds. 1150 01:10:20,400 --> 01:10:23,120 It's that weird mix of being extremely excited 1151 01:10:23,120 --> 01:10:26,920 about the possibility and extremely sceptical 1152 01:10:26,920 --> 01:10:29,720 about actually finding something 1153 01:10:29,720 --> 01:10:32,840 that's going to change the way that we understand 1154 01:10:32,840 --> 01:10:35,440 what the Norse were doing in North America. 1155 01:10:38,200 --> 01:10:41,080 You know, you don't get that moment very often - 1156 01:10:41,080 --> 01:10:45,160 to walk out into a place that has the potential to change history. 1157 01:10:51,400 --> 01:10:55,160 Space archaeologist Sarah has discovered pyramids 1158 01:10:55,160 --> 01:10:57,080 where no-one else spotted them. 1159 01:10:59,120 --> 01:11:02,480 If she can convince Doug she's found a Viking site, 1160 01:11:02,480 --> 01:11:06,200 then she may be on the verge of another world-beating discovery. 1161 01:11:07,360 --> 01:11:08,640 First we hit this rock - 1162 01:11:08,640 --> 01:11:10,960 we didn't know that it was fire cracked, at first - 1163 01:11:10,960 --> 01:11:12,600 just cos it was so covered in muck. 1164 01:11:12,600 --> 01:11:16,320 And we started finding slag up here. 1165 01:11:16,320 --> 01:11:20,880 Dense, dense concentration of slag here. 1166 01:11:20,880 --> 01:11:23,000 Well, it looks like a spot where, you know, 1167 01:11:23,000 --> 01:11:24,720 you would be doing iron smelting - 1168 01:11:24,720 --> 01:11:29,120 and so the question really comes down to, who is doing it here? 1169 01:11:29,120 --> 01:11:31,600 And it doesn't look totally unfamiliar. 1170 01:11:31,600 --> 01:11:34,720 In the sense that, you know, these are the kinds of features 1171 01:11:34,720 --> 01:11:40,400 that you often see for ironworking within Norse contexts. 1172 01:11:40,400 --> 01:11:42,680 I want to see what's around this, 1173 01:11:42,680 --> 01:11:47,560 because when you have a dug-in feature full of slag 1174 01:11:47,560 --> 01:11:51,480 with pretty obviously fire-altered rock, 1175 01:11:51,480 --> 01:11:55,880 you've got evidence of somebody doing something on this spot. 1176 01:11:55,880 --> 01:11:58,360 What would be really interesting is to open this up more 1177 01:11:58,360 --> 01:12:00,040 and it would make it much more clear. 1178 01:12:02,320 --> 01:12:05,560 Sarah excavated inside the L-shaped feature 1179 01:12:05,560 --> 01:12:07,640 she first spotted from space. 1180 01:12:09,280 --> 01:12:12,600 Doug now wants to open up the feature itself. 1181 01:12:20,560 --> 01:12:22,920 Meanwhile, I'm hard on Doug's heels 1182 01:12:22,920 --> 01:12:26,240 making the hour-long trek to Sarah's site at Point Rosee. 1183 01:12:34,240 --> 01:12:38,800 If Leif Erikson came here, he did so just after the first millennium. 1184 01:12:39,840 --> 01:12:44,280 Around the same time that a Viking, Cnut, became king of England. 1185 01:12:45,360 --> 01:12:49,480 It marked the peak of Viking expansion in Europe and America. 1186 01:12:52,280 --> 01:12:56,680 Am I now on a path once trod by the Vikings? 1187 01:12:58,800 --> 01:13:02,520 - Sarah! - Hey, Dan. Welcome! Good to see you, man 1188 01:13:02,520 --> 01:13:05,240 - How are you? What have you found? - Oh, boy! 1189 01:13:05,240 --> 01:13:09,760 - This has been a very exciting couple of weeks. - Yeah? 1190 01:13:09,760 --> 01:13:11,920 It's a good time to turn up. 1191 01:13:13,280 --> 01:13:16,440 Astonishingly, the feature Sarah saw from space 1192 01:13:16,440 --> 01:13:18,760 may be emerging from the ground. 1193 01:13:21,400 --> 01:13:23,800 Do you think it's telling us anything, this surface? 1194 01:13:23,800 --> 01:13:28,640 Yeah, indeed. It looks like there is a great deal of structure. 1195 01:13:28,640 --> 01:13:30,920 - There's banding... - Yeah, these bands, 1196 01:13:30,920 --> 01:13:32,520 what are these black bands here? 1197 01:13:32,520 --> 01:13:35,120 Well, what this looks like is it looks like turf blocks 1198 01:13:35,120 --> 01:13:38,120 that have been put and cut and placed here. 1199 01:13:38,120 --> 01:13:41,560 There are actually sheets of turf that are here. 1200 01:13:41,560 --> 01:13:43,360 So, someone's made a wall using turf? 1201 01:13:43,360 --> 01:13:45,720 That is what it looks like. 1202 01:13:47,200 --> 01:13:48,600 Who would do a thing like that?! 1203 01:13:48,600 --> 01:13:51,160 - THEY LAUGH - Dun-dun-DUN! 1204 01:13:51,160 --> 01:13:56,320 So, you've dug turf walls all over the North Atlantic, right? 1205 01:13:56,320 --> 01:13:57,880 Do they look like this? 1206 01:13:57,880 --> 01:14:02,200 Actually, they look similar to this, and that is what 1207 01:14:02,200 --> 01:14:05,880 we need to do a little bit more digging to figure out. 1208 01:14:05,880 --> 01:14:11,720 So, it's amazing that turf in amongst some other turf 1209 01:14:11,720 --> 01:14:12,760 shows up from space. 1210 01:14:12,760 --> 01:14:15,680 - Whatever it is you picked up on the remote sensing... - Yep. 1211 01:14:15,680 --> 01:14:18,480 ..you picked up something that's actually here. 1212 01:14:22,360 --> 01:14:26,320 Doug arrived a sceptic, but he's converted to the cause. 1213 01:14:27,400 --> 01:14:29,920 Right now, the simplest answer 1214 01:14:29,920 --> 01:14:33,960 is that it looks like a small activity area, 1215 01:14:33,960 --> 01:14:37,400 maybe connected to a larger farm... 1216 01:14:37,400 --> 01:14:39,360 that's Norse. 1217 01:14:39,360 --> 01:14:41,440 You sort of have to explain that away. 1218 01:14:41,440 --> 01:14:42,960 If we were in Iceland, 1219 01:14:42,960 --> 01:14:46,600 I wouldn't think twice about what was happening here. 1220 01:14:46,600 --> 01:14:48,680 The thing that really makes you pause, 1221 01:14:48,680 --> 01:14:52,040 the thing that really makes you want to check 1222 01:14:52,040 --> 01:14:54,200 every last little bit of it, 1223 01:14:54,200 --> 01:14:56,920 is that it's in Newfoundland. 1224 01:14:56,920 --> 01:14:59,560 I'm feeling very excited, I'm feeling very good. 1225 01:14:59,560 --> 01:15:02,680 They have dug exactly where Sarah told them to dig 1226 01:15:02,680 --> 01:15:06,600 and they found what looks like a furnace and the wall of a building. 1227 01:15:06,600 --> 01:15:09,920 Now, as far as I'm concerned, that's a Viking settlement. 1228 01:15:11,000 --> 01:15:14,000 I am just thrilled having the Norse specialist here 1229 01:15:14,000 --> 01:15:16,040 say that the turf wall that we found, 1230 01:15:16,040 --> 01:15:19,200 just in the area where the satellite images showed it should be, 1231 01:15:19,200 --> 01:15:22,760 was there, and he said it looks like Norse turf. 1232 01:15:25,800 --> 01:15:29,840 Turf suggests the settlement might just be Viking - 1233 01:15:29,840 --> 01:15:33,960 but proof will come from the metalwork and from ageing the site. 1234 01:15:36,640 --> 01:15:41,720 So, the seeds are sent off for radiocarbon dating. 1235 01:15:41,720 --> 01:15:44,880 We're hoping for anything around 1000 AD. 1236 01:15:44,880 --> 01:15:47,200 The metalwork is also on its way. 1237 01:15:55,160 --> 01:15:58,400 It's the start of an excruciating two-week wait 1238 01:15:58,400 --> 01:16:00,280 for the results to come through. 1239 01:16:01,520 --> 01:16:05,400 For me, it's remarkable to think Vikings and Brits 1240 01:16:05,400 --> 01:16:09,080 could have sailed the 2,000 miles all the way 1241 01:16:09,080 --> 01:16:11,440 to what is now North America. 1242 01:16:15,400 --> 01:16:19,360 It would be astonishing to finally have the dating proof. 1243 01:16:24,440 --> 01:16:27,760 Two weeks later, the dates have come through. 1244 01:16:30,200 --> 01:16:34,800 You know, we've been working almost a year on processing all this data 1245 01:16:34,800 --> 01:16:36,760 and we've spent a month in the field, 1246 01:16:36,760 --> 01:16:39,920 so I've actually been having trouble sleeping the last couple of nights, 1247 01:16:39,920 --> 01:16:42,680 cos I know the radiocarbon results are in 1248 01:16:42,680 --> 01:16:45,280 and I'm about to find out one way or the other. 1249 01:16:49,720 --> 01:16:51,440 - Hey, Dan. - Hey. 1250 01:16:51,440 --> 01:16:52,680 What's going on? 1251 01:16:52,680 --> 01:16:54,200 HE SIGHS HEAVILY 1252 01:16:54,200 --> 01:16:57,920 Just waiting. The waiting game. It's like D-Day. 1253 01:16:59,400 --> 01:17:00,760 So... 1254 01:17:02,160 --> 01:17:04,240 I'm feeling a little nervous. How are you doing? 1255 01:17:04,240 --> 01:17:06,360 I'm very nervous. 1256 01:17:06,360 --> 01:17:09,240 It's funny, like... 1257 01:17:09,240 --> 01:17:12,360 if the dates are good, I'll be happy. 1258 01:17:12,360 --> 01:17:14,560 You know, and if they're really off, 1259 01:17:14,560 --> 01:17:17,360 there are more questions than answers. 1260 01:17:17,360 --> 01:17:19,640 Yeah, if they are bang on, it would be amazing. 1261 01:17:21,800 --> 01:17:24,800 It would just be really good to have the dates work out. 1262 01:17:24,800 --> 01:17:27,640 - That's good. - So, are you ready? 1263 01:17:27,640 --> 01:17:29,360 OK, let's do it! 1264 01:17:36,760 --> 01:17:38,480 Here we go. 1265 01:17:53,400 --> 01:17:55,280 It's a lot more recent. 1266 01:17:58,520 --> 01:18:00,280 Yeah, it says 1600s. 1267 01:18:00,280 --> 01:18:01,960 1800s. 1268 01:18:03,400 --> 01:18:06,600 Which makes no sense, given what we have. 1269 01:18:07,680 --> 01:18:10,560 I mean, there's no way that this is a modern site. 1270 01:18:10,560 --> 01:18:12,760 You saw the conditions at that site. 1271 01:18:12,760 --> 01:18:14,880 You know, lots of mixing. 1272 01:18:14,880 --> 01:18:17,920 Lots of potential later intrusions, 1273 01:18:17,920 --> 01:18:20,360 especially with the amount of water that was there. 1274 01:18:20,360 --> 01:18:25,520 That berry... Those berries were not from a particularly strong context. 1275 01:18:25,520 --> 01:18:26,640 - Yeah. - Um... 1276 01:18:26,640 --> 01:18:28,680 So, the seeds could have just drifted down 1277 01:18:28,680 --> 01:18:30,440 through the layers over the years? 1278 01:18:30,440 --> 01:18:32,720 Yeah, or you know, things could have been exposed. 1279 01:18:32,720 --> 01:18:36,320 But the reality is, those dates 1280 01:18:36,320 --> 01:18:40,120 don't match the archaeology, at all. 1281 01:18:40,120 --> 01:18:44,040 And so, you know, given what we have with the turf walls 1282 01:18:44,040 --> 01:18:46,880 - and the smelting and everything else... - I still believe in you. 1283 01:18:46,880 --> 01:18:50,160 Don't worry. I agree. Everything else screams "Viking". 1284 01:18:57,720 --> 01:18:59,600 It needs a lot more work. 1285 01:19:07,800 --> 01:19:11,640 After all the effort over the last 12 months, 1286 01:19:11,640 --> 01:19:13,760 are these dates the full story? 1287 01:19:15,000 --> 01:19:17,200 I trust Sarah's science. 1288 01:19:18,400 --> 01:19:22,040 In the past, I've worked with her to discover iconic monuments. 1289 01:19:23,640 --> 01:19:26,760 In the more challenging terrain of the North Atlantic, 1290 01:19:26,760 --> 01:19:31,360 she has found buried structures in Scotland and Iceland. 1291 01:19:31,360 --> 01:19:35,920 The evidence on the satellite image of Point Rosee looked convincing. 1292 01:19:35,920 --> 01:19:38,360 The exact same size as the long houses 1293 01:19:38,360 --> 01:19:40,360 - at L'Anse aux Meadows. - No way! 1294 01:19:41,880 --> 01:19:45,520 All this evidence, plus the eight kilos of possible metalwork, 1295 01:19:45,520 --> 01:19:48,720 just doesn't tally with the dates from the seeds. 1296 01:19:49,880 --> 01:19:51,760 Doug doesn't see it as a setback. 1297 01:19:53,840 --> 01:19:55,800 I've actually always been very sceptical 1298 01:19:55,800 --> 01:19:58,160 about the potential for radiocarbon on the site. 1299 01:19:58,160 --> 01:20:01,600 The preservation is very poor for any organics, 1300 01:20:01,600 --> 01:20:04,360 and the samples that were available 1301 01:20:04,360 --> 01:20:08,880 are not very closely associated with the actual activity. 1302 01:20:08,880 --> 01:20:14,040 So, the seeds - it's not even clear that they were charred 1303 01:20:14,040 --> 01:20:16,840 and they're coming out of material 1304 01:20:16,840 --> 01:20:20,320 that's at the upper levels of this feature. 1305 01:20:24,560 --> 01:20:26,440 So, it's down to the metalwork, 1306 01:20:26,440 --> 01:20:29,240 and we'll now double-check every other finding. 1307 01:20:31,120 --> 01:20:33,280 When we set out to do this project work, 1308 01:20:33,280 --> 01:20:36,800 our basic hypothesis was that we wouldn't find anything 1309 01:20:36,800 --> 01:20:40,200 and I think we've proven ourselves wrong - 1310 01:20:40,200 --> 01:20:44,400 but now I really want the site to be Norse, 1311 01:20:44,400 --> 01:20:46,800 because I don't know what else it could be! 1312 01:20:48,000 --> 01:20:50,160 So, Sarah assembles a crack team. 1313 01:20:50,160 --> 01:20:53,960 It's our last chance to prove that Point Rosee is a Viking site. 1314 01:20:56,520 --> 01:20:59,680 Dr Tom Birch, a specialist in Viking metallurgy, 1315 01:20:59,680 --> 01:21:02,200 will analyse the metalworking debris. 1316 01:21:02,200 --> 01:21:04,880 - It looks like they're mostly quartz. - Yeah. 1317 01:21:04,880 --> 01:21:10,000 He'll work with a world-renowned laboratory at Aberdeen University. 1318 01:21:10,000 --> 01:21:13,720 Doug Bolender will review all Sarah's findings... 1319 01:21:15,520 --> 01:21:17,520 ..and we'll explore if anyone else 1320 01:21:17,520 --> 01:21:19,800 could have forged metal at Point Rosee. 1321 01:21:21,280 --> 01:21:24,520 No indigenous group ever produced it, 1322 01:21:24,520 --> 01:21:28,480 so we turn to Newfoundland historian, Dr Olaf Janzen, 1323 01:21:28,480 --> 01:21:31,520 to ask about more recent settlers. 1324 01:21:31,520 --> 01:21:33,720 When did the first settlers arrive? 1325 01:21:33,720 --> 01:21:36,040 There were probably Basque fishermen 1326 01:21:36,040 --> 01:21:38,920 passing through the area and fishing seasonally, 1327 01:21:38,920 --> 01:21:41,880 but the first settlers came in the early 18th century. 1328 01:21:41,880 --> 01:21:46,480 So, would these settlers have been making their own metal tools? 1329 01:21:46,480 --> 01:21:49,400 I came across no evidence of that. 1330 01:21:49,400 --> 01:21:53,600 I have a document here that was published in 1763 1331 01:21:53,600 --> 01:21:59,920 and it describes the account of an officer on the Lark frigate. 1332 01:21:59,920 --> 01:22:04,200 He mentions furs, he mentions the fish, he mentions timber. 1333 01:22:04,200 --> 01:22:07,280 There isn't any mention here of mineral resources. 1334 01:22:07,280 --> 01:22:09,840 So, if it wasn't the European settlers, 1335 01:22:09,840 --> 01:22:11,400 it wasn't the Basque fishermen, 1336 01:22:11,400 --> 01:22:13,600 how can we explain the evidence of metalwork? 1337 01:22:13,600 --> 01:22:16,560 You would have to go back to the site at L'Anse aux Meadows, 1338 01:22:16,560 --> 01:22:20,760 which is the only confirmed site of that vintage. 1339 01:22:20,760 --> 01:22:25,720 There we do have examples of bog iron being smelted - 1340 01:22:25,720 --> 01:22:28,080 worked into nails - 1341 01:22:28,080 --> 01:22:34,800 and that site is now perceived as a repair station for boats 1342 01:22:34,800 --> 01:22:37,920 going further on into the Gulf of St Lawrence - 1343 01:22:37,920 --> 01:22:41,240 and your site is in the Gulf of St Lawrence. 1344 01:22:41,240 --> 01:22:42,960 So, it's entirely plausible. 1345 01:22:49,400 --> 01:22:51,320 Judgment day has finally arrived 1346 01:22:51,320 --> 01:22:53,680 for the Newfoundland Point Rosee site. 1347 01:22:55,040 --> 01:22:56,160 After three weeks, 1348 01:22:56,160 --> 01:22:59,480 the emergency team has sifted through all the evidence. 1349 01:23:00,880 --> 01:23:05,680 Sarah and I have been summoned by Viking metal expert Tom Birch 1350 01:23:05,680 --> 01:23:08,040 for the results. 1351 01:23:08,040 --> 01:23:10,240 It's yet another nail-biting moment. 1352 01:23:12,280 --> 01:23:15,680 Well, some of the leads we had didn't turn out like we hoped. 1353 01:23:15,680 --> 01:23:19,080 We still... I don't think we still have the evidence that we need 1354 01:23:19,080 --> 01:23:20,560 to go to the world and say 1355 01:23:20,560 --> 01:23:23,720 there were Vikings on Point Rosee in Newfoundland. 1356 01:23:23,720 --> 01:23:25,720 So, a lot of it has come down to today. 1357 01:23:25,720 --> 01:23:27,400 This is a high pressure situation! 1358 01:23:27,400 --> 01:23:28,800 We're going to talk to Tom. 1359 01:23:28,800 --> 01:23:31,160 If Tom can come up with the evidence we need, 1360 01:23:31,160 --> 01:23:33,000 we can still save this project. 1361 01:23:39,760 --> 01:23:43,680 We analysed this item, which you suspected to be a metal object, 1362 01:23:43,680 --> 01:23:48,800 and then we also analysed some hammer scale, these small fragments 1363 01:23:48,800 --> 01:23:53,880 and then the last thing we analysed were these lumps of slag. 1364 01:23:53,880 --> 01:23:56,440 Now, I took this to the geologists 1365 01:23:56,440 --> 01:23:58,640 and when we cut a sample from it 1366 01:23:58,640 --> 01:24:02,760 there were some very bright, shiny inclusions, 1367 01:24:02,760 --> 01:24:06,080 which I thought were remnants of metal, 1368 01:24:06,080 --> 01:24:08,600 but actually this is a stone. 1369 01:24:08,600 --> 01:24:10,800 - OK... - Welcome to archaeology! 1370 01:24:10,800 --> 01:24:13,360 - Exactly, yeah. - Oh, well. - But this isn't any old stone, 1371 01:24:13,360 --> 01:24:16,360 - this is over a billion years old, basically. - So, hang on. 1372 01:24:16,360 --> 01:24:20,560 - This - one of our prized objects... - Yeah. - ..is a stone. 1373 01:24:20,560 --> 01:24:23,320 - It's a billion years old, that's nice... - Yeah. 1374 01:24:23,320 --> 01:24:25,200 ..but it doesn't tell us anything. 1375 01:24:25,200 --> 01:24:29,320 - What else have you got? - The hammer scale isn't hammer scale. 1376 01:24:29,320 --> 01:24:33,320 These are little bits of iron oxide. 1377 01:24:33,320 --> 01:24:37,160 - So, our second vital clue... - Yeah. - ..turns out to be nothing, as well. 1378 01:24:37,160 --> 01:24:38,600 It's natural. 1379 01:24:42,840 --> 01:24:47,760 - I was fooled. - OK. So, we are zero for two, at the moment. - OK. 1380 01:24:47,760 --> 01:24:52,680 - You feeling nervous, Sarah? - No, I'm not. - OK. Well, I am! 1381 01:24:52,680 --> 01:24:56,320 That only leaves what Sarah thought to be slag, 1382 01:24:56,320 --> 01:24:59,840 the waste product from the metal refining process. 1383 01:24:59,840 --> 01:25:03,120 If this isn't evidence for Viking metalwork, 1384 01:25:03,120 --> 01:25:05,000 then we're well and truly stuffed. 1385 01:25:05,000 --> 01:25:09,560 - The smithying slag isn't smithying slag. - OK. 1386 01:25:09,560 --> 01:25:14,280 But it is bog ore. Bog iron ore. OK. 1387 01:25:14,280 --> 01:25:17,960 - And there are some very interesting things about it. - OK. 1388 01:25:17,960 --> 01:25:21,920 This has been collected and this has been roasted 1389 01:25:21,920 --> 01:25:23,800 to drive off the impurities. 1390 01:25:23,800 --> 01:25:27,040 The point is, this is being processed for something. 1391 01:25:27,040 --> 01:25:29,840 So, this is evidence for metalworking? 1392 01:25:29,840 --> 01:25:32,720 This is evidence for metallurgy. 1393 01:25:32,720 --> 01:25:37,760 Now, the only reason you roast ore is to later extract iron from it. 1394 01:25:39,720 --> 01:25:41,600 Sarah, this is pretty exciting right? 1395 01:25:41,600 --> 01:25:44,240 Because we've talked to historians who said nobody else 1396 01:25:44,240 --> 01:25:47,440 - was making metals on this coast ever in the whole of history... - Yeah. 1397 01:25:47,440 --> 01:25:50,360 ..apart from the Vikings. That sounds good to me. 1398 01:25:50,360 --> 01:25:52,080 So, it's got to be Viking! 1399 01:25:55,960 --> 01:25:58,440 - Sarah? - All right! It's good! 1400 01:25:58,440 --> 01:26:00,120 We got there! 1401 01:26:03,840 --> 01:26:08,720 This fragment of bog iron ore is the proof we've been waiting for. 1402 01:26:08,720 --> 01:26:11,640 Hundreds of years before Columbus, 1403 01:26:11,640 --> 01:26:16,080 Viking pioneers like Leif Erikson came to Point Rosee. 1404 01:26:20,200 --> 01:26:23,640 They smelted metal here to service their ships 1405 01:26:23,640 --> 01:26:25,400 in workshops just like those 1406 01:26:25,400 --> 01:26:28,240 we've seen on our journey across the Atlantic. 1407 01:26:30,320 --> 01:26:34,800 It looks like this was another Viking refuelling station 1408 01:26:34,800 --> 01:26:37,360 beyond L'Anse aux Meadows. 1409 01:26:38,680 --> 01:26:41,240 It reinforces the idea that Vinland, 1410 01:26:41,240 --> 01:26:44,040 the mythical place in the Viking sagas, 1411 01:26:44,040 --> 01:26:48,200 is still out there to be discovered even further to the west. 1412 01:26:50,600 --> 01:26:55,000 Finally, we can all celebrate a breakthrough! 1413 01:26:55,000 --> 01:26:58,560 - Sarah. - Yes. - Without whom we would never have embarked 1414 01:26:58,560 --> 01:27:00,560 on this journey of discovery. 1415 01:27:01,560 --> 01:27:05,320 Viking Age explorers - they didn't leave much behind, 1416 01:27:05,320 --> 01:27:08,400 but they left just enough for Sarah to see it from space. So... 1417 01:27:08,400 --> 01:27:11,040 - I'll drink to that! Cheers. - Cheers. 1418 01:27:11,040 --> 01:27:15,040 Without my incredible team, I wouldn't have been able to do this. 1419 01:27:15,040 --> 01:27:18,280 I'm right here, Sarah. I'm right here. 1420 01:27:18,280 --> 01:27:19,800 Dan, it goes without saying, 1421 01:27:19,800 --> 01:27:22,840 - that you will be with me on every adventure. - Sure thing. Sure thing. 1422 01:27:22,840 --> 01:27:25,200 Hey, and here's to more Viking sites. 1423 01:27:25,200 --> 01:27:27,680 Let's make Doug's life a misery over the next few years. 1424 01:27:27,680 --> 01:27:30,320 - Let's keep him busy. - Yes, yes, yes! - Let's keep him busy. 1425 01:27:30,320 --> 01:27:32,440 I am so excited about this! 1426 01:27:32,440 --> 01:27:34,440 The thing that is amazing here 1427 01:27:34,440 --> 01:27:37,160 is to actually be in a moment of discovery - 1428 01:27:37,160 --> 01:27:39,920 and something that's brought people together. 1429 01:27:39,920 --> 01:27:41,280 It's extremely surprising 1430 01:27:41,280 --> 01:27:44,000 that an Egyptologist is the person who's finding this, 1431 01:27:44,000 --> 01:27:47,360 but, you know, it's actually always the person you least expect. 1432 01:27:49,080 --> 01:27:50,720 Well, it's been a long journey, 1433 01:27:50,720 --> 01:27:53,840 but today it feels like we've reached a point 1434 01:27:53,840 --> 01:27:55,480 in which we can be certain. 1435 01:27:55,480 --> 01:27:58,440 We can actually tell the world now, there were Vikings further west 1436 01:27:58,440 --> 01:28:00,240 than we've ever found them before 1437 01:28:00,240 --> 01:28:02,680 and that Sarah's research... 1438 01:28:02,680 --> 01:28:05,280 well, it might just have sparked a revolution 1439 01:28:05,280 --> 01:28:07,400 in our understanding of the Vikings. 1440 01:28:10,720 --> 01:28:12,360 I am absolutely thrilled. 1441 01:28:13,480 --> 01:28:17,520 Typically, in archaeology, you only ever get to write a footnote 1442 01:28:17,520 --> 01:28:19,040 in the history books - 1443 01:28:19,040 --> 01:28:21,760 but what we seem to have at Point Rosee, 1444 01:28:21,760 --> 01:28:24,520 may be the beginning of an entirely new chapter.121501

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