The Faroe Islands were colonised much earlier than
previously1 believed, and it wasn't by the Vikings, according to new research. New archaeological evidence places human colonisation in the 4th to 6th centuries AD, at least 300-500 years earlier than previously demonstrated.
The research, directed by Dr Mike J Church from Durham University and Símun V Arge from the National Museum of the Faroe Islands as part of the multidisciplinary project "Heart of the Atlantic," is published in the Quaternary Science Reviews.
The research challenges the nature, scale and
timing2 of human settlement of the wider North Atlantic region and has implications for the colonisation of similar island groups across the world.
The Faroes were the first stepping stone beyond Shetland for the
dispersal(分散,传播) of European people across the North Atlantic that
culminated3 on the shores of
continental4 North America in the 11th century AD, about 500 years before Columbus made his famous voyage.
The research was carried out on an archaeological site at Á Sondum on the island of Sandoy.
Analysis showed an extensive windblown sand deposit containing patches of burnt
peat(泥煤,泥炭) ash from human activity, dating human settlement to pre-Viking phases. These ash spreads contained
barley5 grains which were accidentally burnt in domestic
hearths6 and were then spread by humans onto the windblown sand surface during the 4th-6th centuries and 6th-8th centuries, a common practice identified in the North Atlantic during this period to control wind erosion.
Lead author Dr Mike Church, from Durham University's Department of
Archaeology7, said: "There is now firm archaeological evidence for the human colonisation of the Faroes by people some 300-500 years before the large scale Viking colonisation of the 9th century AD, although we don't yet know who these people were or where they came from.
"The majority of archaeological evidence for this early colonisation is likely to have been destroyed by the major Viking invasion, explaining the lack of proof found in the Faroes for the earlier settlement. This also raises questions about the timing of human activity on other islands systems where similarly evidence may have been destroyed."
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