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| GREENLAND
  HISTORY   (Contact)     Please CLICK on following
  subjects for details & images to enlarge              Greenland
  history is a life under extreme Arctic conditions. In 2017 an ice cap still
  covers over 70 percent of the island, which confines human activity largely
  to the coasts.          The first
  people are believed to have arrived in Greenland around 2500 BCE. Their
  descendants may have died out and were succeeded by several other groups
  immigrating from continental North America. 
  There has been no evidence that           The
  earliest known cultures in Greenland are the Saqqaq
  Culture (2500–800
  BCE) and the Independence I Culture in northern Greenland (2400–1300 BCE).  These two cultures are believed to have
  descended from separate groups that came to Greenland from northern
  Canada.  Around 800 BCE, the so-called
  Independence II
  Culture arose
  in the region where the Independence I
  Culture had previously existed.  The Independence
  II Culture may have been succeeded by an early Dorset Culture (700 BCE to 1 AD), but some Independence II artifacts
  date from as recently as the 1st century BCE.   Archeological studies suggest that in Greenland the Dorset Culture may be a continuation of
  the Independence II Culture;
  the two cultures have thus been called "Greenlandic
  Dorset".  Artefacts
  associated with early Dorset Culture
  in Greenland are found as far north as Inglefield
  Land on the west coast and the Dove
  Bugt  area on the east Greenland coast.          After the
  Early Dorset Culture
  disappeared by around 1 AD, Greenland was apparently uninhabited until Late
  Dorset people settled on the Greenlandic side of the Nares Strait around 700.  The late Dorset
  Culture in the north of Greenland endured until about 1300.   Meanwhile the Norse arrived and settled
  in the southern part of the island in 980.   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =            Europeans
  became aware of Greenland's existence, probably in the early 10th Century,
  when Gunnbjörn Ulfsson, sailing from Norway to Iceland, was carried there by
  a storm.  He found some islands off
  the mainland.  During the 980s, explorers
            The Norse
  established their settlements along fjords (such as the Tunuliarfik and Aniaaq fjords in the central area of the
  Eastern settlement).  Because this was
  during a Medieval Warm Period
  when the vegetation there was more abundant from what it is in the 21st
  Century.  Excavations reveal that the
  fjords at that time were surrounded by forests of 4 to 6 metre tall birch
  trees and by hills covered with grass and willow brush.  The Norse probably cleared the landscape
  by felling trees to use as building material and fuel, and by allowing their
  sheep and goats to graze in both summer and winter.          According
  to the sagas, Erik the Red was
  exiled from Iceland for three years for committing murder.  He sailed to Greenland, where he explored
  the coastline and claimed certain regions as his own.  He then returned to Iceland to persuade
  people to join him in establishing a settlement on Greenland.  The Icelandic sagas reveal that 25 ships
  left Iceland with Erik the Red in
  985 AD, and that only 14 of them arrived safely in Greenland.  This date has been approximately confirmed
  by radiocarbon dating of remains at the first settlement at Brattahlid (now
  Qassiarsuk, which yielded a date of about 1000 AD.  According to the sagas, it was also in the year 1000 AD that
  Erik's son, Leif Eirikson, left
  the settlement to explore the regions around Vinland,
  which included Newfoundland and some Midwestern North
  American areas.   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =            The Saqqaq Culture (named after a Saqqaq
  settlement that is the site of many archaeological finds) was a Paleo-Eskimo Culture in Greenland.        The earliest
  known culture in southern Greenland, the Saqqaq
  Culture, existed from around 2500 BCE until about 800 BCE.  This culture coexisted with the Independence I Culture of northern
  Greenland, which developed around 2400 BCE and lasted until about 1300 BCE.  After the Saqqaq
  Culture disappeared, the Independence
  II Culture of northern Greenland and the Early Dorset Culture of West Greenland
  emerged.  The timeframe of the
  transition from Saqqaq Culture
  to Early Dorset in western Greenland is not definitely known.           In the
  northeastern part of Greenland, the culture is designated "Independence I" while in the
  western part of Greenland, it is the 
  "Saqqaq Culture".  The Saqqaq
  Culture came in two phases, the main difference of the two being
  that the newer phase used  sandstone
  as a tool.  The younger phase of the Saqqaq Culture coincides with the oldest
  phase of the Dorset Culture.         Frozen
  remains of a Saqqaq called "Inuk"
  were found in western Greenland (Qeqertarsuaq) and have been DNA sequenced.  He had brown eyes, black hair, and
  shovel-shaped teeth.  It was
  determined that he lived about 4000 years ago, and was related to native
  populations in northeastern Siberia. 
  The Saqqaq people are not the ancestors of contemporary Kalaallit people, but instead are
  related to modern Chukchi and Koryak peoples.  It is unclear whether they came to
  Greenland in boats or by traveling over the frozen sea during winter.           Saqqaq
  peoples were adapted to extremely cold climates.  During the warmer parts of the year they lived in small tents
  (like the later Thule people)  and hunted
  seals, seabirds, and other marine animals.  The people of the Saqqaq Culture used silicified slate, agate,
  quartzite, and rock crystals as materials for their tools.   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =            The Independence I Culture was a Paleo-Eskimo culture of peoples who
  lived in northern Greenland from 2,400 to 1,000 BCE.  It is named after Independence Fjord.  They lived at the same time as the Saqqaq Culture of southern
  Greenland.  The Independence II Culture had a similar
  geographical distribution from the 8th Century BCE, about 600 years after the
  disappearance of Independence I.  Nevertheless, the Independence I occupation of northern
  Greenland seems to have been much more intensive than that Independence II.          The
  archaeological finds of both Independence
  cultures are credited to Danish explorer Eigil
  Knuth.    = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =            The Dorset Culture (also called the Dorset Tradition) was a Paleo-Eskimo culture (500 BCE to between
  1000 and 1500 AD) that preceded the Inuit
  in the Arctic of North America.  It is
  named after Cape Dorset in
  Nunavut, Canada where the first evidence of its existence was found.  The culture had four phases according to
  differences in the technologies for hunting and tool making.  Artifacts include distinctive triangular
  end-blades, soapstone lamps, and burins.          The Dorset  were first identified as a separate
  culture in 1925.  The Dorset may have become extinct by 1500
  AD at the latest and perhaps as early as 1000 AD.  The Thule people, who began
  emigrating east from Alaska in the 11th Century, spread through the lands
  previously inhabited by the Dorset.  However, there is little evidence that the
  Inuit
  and Dorset ever met.  Modern genetic studies reveal that the Dorset population was distinct from
  later groups and there was virtually no evidence of genetic or cultural
  interaction between the Dorset and the Thule
  peoples.          Inuit
  legends recount them encountering people they called the Tuniit 
  (singular Tuniq or Sivullirmiut ) "First Inhabitants".  According to legend, the First Inhabitants were giants, taller
  and stronger than the Inuit but
  afraid and not sociable.  It is
  believed that the Dorset and
  the later Thule
  people were encountered by Norsemen who visited the area.  The Norse called these indigenous peoples Skrælings.       Apollonio, Spencer.  2008. 
  Lands That Hold One Spellbound: A
  Story of East Greenland.  University of Calgary Press. p. 283   Byock, Jesse.  1988. 
  Medieval Iceland: Society, Sagas
  and Power.  University of
  California Press.   Fagan, Brian M. 
  2005.  Ancient North America: The Archaeology
  of a Continent (Fourth ed.). 
  New York: Thames & Hudson.      
  pp. 196–97, 210   Ford, James. 
  1959.  Eskimo prehistory in the vicinity of
  Point Barrow, Alaska   Anthropological Papers of the American
  Museum       of Natural History.
  New York. 47 (1).   Hjálmarsson,  Jón R.  2009.  History of Iceland:
  From the Settlement to the Present Day.  Reykjavik: Forlagið Publishing.   Jensen, J. F.  2016. 
  Greenlandic Dorset . In M. Friesen and O. Mason. The Oxford
  Handbook of the Prehistoric Arctic.   Laursen, Dan.  2016.  
  Eigil Greve Knuth (1903-1996)
  , Arctic, University of Calgary,  Vol.
  49, No. 4, pp. 401-403.   Lidegaard,
  Mads.  1981.    Eigil Knuth.   Dansk Biografisk Leksikon, vol. 8 (Copenhagen),   Maanasa Raghavan, 
  Eske Willerslev, et al. 
  2014.  The genetic prehistory
  of the New World Arctic.  Science. 345
  (6200): 1020.   McGhee, Robert.  2001. 
  Ancient People of the Arctic.  Canadian Museum of Civilization. UBC
  Press. p. 31.   Mowat, Farley.  1973.  
  Westviking: The Ancient Norse in Greenland and North America. Funk & Wagnalls Co.   O'Carroll, Etain. 
  2005.  Greenland and the
  Arctic. Lonely Planet. p. 180.   Park, Robert W. 
  2014.  Stories of Arctic
  colonization. Science. 345 (6200): 1004–05.   Ramsay, Raymond.  1972.  
  Appendix II: Sunken Islands near
  Iceland. No Longer on the Map.  New York: Viking Press. pp. 246–7.   Rasmussen, M; et al. 
  2010.  Ancient human genome sequence of an
  extinct Palaeo-Eskimo. 
  Nature. Nature Publishing Group.       463 (7282):
  463, 757–762.   Sanders, Ruth. 2010.  German: Biography of
  a Language. 
  Oxford University Press. p. 209.   Seaver, Kristen A.  1996.  The
  Frozen Echo.  Stanford
  University Press.   Seaver, Kirsten A..  2014.  The Last
  Vikings: The Epic Story of the Great Norse Voyagers.  I.B.Tauris Publ.   Smiley, Jane. The Sagas of the Icelanders.  Deluxe. New York: Penguin Group, 2000.
  653–74.   Vikør, Lars S.  1993. 
  The Nordic Languages. Their Status and
  Interrelations. 
  Oslo: Novus Press. pp. 55–59, 168–169, 209–214.   Watson, A.D. 
  1923.  The Norse Discovery of America. 
  Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 17: 260.         |