ARCHAEOLOGY

WHAT’S IN A NORSE NAME?

ntrigued by a number of nauticalthemed Norse place-names for inland locations on the Scottish island Orkney, researchers have and denotes a farm where transport vessels are moored. Using remote sensing and environmental data from sediment samples, the team mapped several infilled channels that once connected farmsteads around the island’s Loch of Harray to the stronghold of Viking earls at Birsay on the northwest coast. Environmental scientist Richard Bates of the University of St. Andrews says that farmers would have been able to trade and transport regular tribute to Birsay without having to brave Orkney’s treacherous coastal waters. “Perhaps I’ve come home for the winter and I can get my boat right up close to where I live, get it repaired, and get goods on and off easily,” Bates says. “The waters around Orkney are very difficult, even at the best of times, so if you can travel inland on a smaller craft, that’s a much easier option.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ARCHAEOLOGY

ARCHAEOLOGY2 min read
Palaces Of The Golden Horde
When Chaucer wrote The Canterbury Tales in the late fourteenth century, he set one of his stories in “Sarai, in the land of the Tartars.” At that time, Sarai was widely known as the capital of the mighty Golden Horde. An independent state within the
ARCHAEOLOGY1 min read
Educational Idols
During construction of a new drain in the village of Varuna, near the city of Mysuru in southern India, archaeologists discovered three idols belonging to followers of Jainism. One of the oldest religions in Asia, Jainism traces its history through 2
ARCHAEOLOGY2 min read
Archaeology
Editor in Chief Jarrett A. Lobell Deputy Editor Eric A. Powell Executive Editor Daniel Weiss Senior Editors Ilana Herzig Benjamin Leonard Editorial Assistant Malin Grunberg Banyasz Creative Director Richard Bleiweiss Maps Ken Feisel Contributing Edit

Related Books & Audiobooks