5 May 2024 The Future is the Product of the Past

Apocalypse Ship of the Vikings

Researchers discovered a stone boat made by Vikings and surprising gifts inside a cave in Iceland.

Aside from the cave, researchers discovered rare Middle Eastern artifacts, as well as orpiment, remains from Turkey, according to the archaeologists.

In Surtshellir Cave in Iceland, the researchers found a boat made of stone, which they said may have been used by the Vikings to prevent Ragnarök, the end of the world in Norse mythology.

The cave is near a volcano that erupted nearly 1,100 years ago, according to the results of the research, which were recently published in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

“The impacts of this eruption must have been unsettling, posing existential challenges for Iceland’s newly arrived settlers”, reads the study.

Archaeological research indicates that after the lava cooled, the Vikings entered the cave and built a boat-shaped structure out of rocks. As a sacrifice, the Vikings would have burned animal bones, such as those of sheep, goats, cattle, horses, and pigs, at high temperatures within this structure.  It’s possible that this was done to avoid Ragnarok.

“The world would end when Surtr, an elemental being present at the world’s creation, would kill the last of the gods in the battle of Ragnarök and then engulf the world in flames”, the researchers wrote.

The archaeologists are baffled as to why such valuable items from as far away as the Middle East were left in the cave. The Vikings traveled as far as the Middle East, and These goods may have made their way to Iceland via trade routes after.

Another theory for why Vikings performed sacrifices and placed artifacts inside the boat is that they were attempting to strengthen Freyr, the god of peace and fertility who was fighting Surtr.

Icelanders converted to Christianity around 1,000 years ago, and they soon stopped depositing objects in the cave. The final items placed in the boat-shaped stone structure included a “set of scale weights with one in the shape of a Christian cross,” according to the team. Even after the Icelandic people converted to Christianity, they continued to associate the cave with the end of the world. According to the team, one Icelandic tradition considers the cave to be “the place where Satan would emerge on Judgment Day,”

Related Articles

Archaeologists say 12,000-year-old flutes discovered in northern Israel may have been used to lure falcons

9 June 2023

9 June 2023

New research reveals that about 12,000 years ago, in northern Israel, humans turned the bones of small birds into instruments...

Altar site for Greek goddess Demeter unearthed in Turkey’s ancient city of Blaundus

21 December 2021

21 December 2021

An altar site for the Greek goddess Demeter was unearthed during the ongoing excavations in the ancient city of Blaundus,...

A painted Wooden Saddle Discovered in an Ancient Tomb in Mongolia Represents Earliest Evidence of Modern Horse Riding

13 December 2023

13 December 2023

Researchers unearthed a wooden saddle framed with iron stirrups in a tomb in Urd Ulaan Uneet, popularly known as the...

Ancient Murals of Two-faced Figures Found in Peru

21 March 2023

21 March 2023

Archaeologists are reporting a number of fascinating discoveries as work on the excavations at Pañamarca progresses that are helping to...

2000-year-old Genuine Pompeii marble relief installed in a wall lining the staircase leading down to the basement in a Belgium home

22 December 2023

22 December 2023

An important marble relief depicting the earthquake of 62 AD, stolen from the ruins of ancient Pompeii in Italy in...

Evidence of Intentional Roman Use of Narcotic Seeds, Found in Bone Vessel in the Netherlands

8 February 2024

8 February 2024

Archaeologists have discovered the first conclusive evidence of the existence of a hallucinogenic and poisonous plant thought to have been...

‘Theodoric the Great’ villa mosaic found near Verona in Italy

17 April 2022

17 April 2022

A section of the ancient Roman mosaic flooring from the 5th century AD villa of Ostrogoth king Theodoric the Great...

2000-year-old quarry discovered in Jerusalem that could be the source of Second temple stones

5 September 2021

5 September 2021

Archaeologists have discovered a 2,000-year-old quarry in Har Hotzvim, now an industrial park in Jerusalem. The Israel Antiquities Authority said...

Researcher Says There is Similarity Between Mayan and Shu Cultures

12 April 2021

12 April 2021

The similarities between Mayan civilization and Shu culture draw the attention of researchers. As it is known, the Sanxingdui ruins,...

Sheikh Sultan Opened ‘Tales from the East’ Exhibition

28 April 2021

28 April 2021

The opening of the ‘Tales from the East’ exhibition organized by the Sharjah Book Authority (SBA) was held with the...

Ancient Dog Figurines Mini Tea Utensils on Display in Nara

21 February 2021

21 February 2021

Nara was the capital of Japan from 710 to 794, also known as the Nara period, before moving to the...

INAH Archaeologists recover the coyote-man of Tacámbaro

26 January 2022

26 January 2022

Archaeologists win the coyote-man trial that lasted 30 years in Mexico. The litigation regarding the coyote-man of Tacámbaro, an important...

Artifacts found in Japan could be prototypes of ninja weapons

14 January 2022

14 January 2022

Artifacts discovered in the ruins of structures associated with warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s 1590 Siege of Odawara may be prototypes of...

The Secret of the Shipwrecks at Theodosius Harbor: 1,600 Years Old Women’s Sandals and Comb

11 April 2023

11 April 2023

The 1,600-year-old sandals and comb unearthed during the excavations of Theodosius Harbor (Portus Theodosiacus), the second-biggest harbor built on the...

Important archaeological find in the seas of Sicily: Archaic stone anchors found off Syracuse

24 November 2023

24 November 2023

During a joint operation by the Maritime Superintendency of the Sicilian Region and the Diving Unit of the Guardia di...