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         Scandinavia Greenland Archaeology:     more detail
  1. Woven into the Earth: Textile finds in Norse Greenland (None) by Else Ostergaard, 2004-11
  2. The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman by Nancy Marie Brown, 2007-10-09
  3. Vikings : The North Atlantic Saga by National Museum of Natural History, 2000-04-15

81. Arnold Busck Antikvariat, Denmark
We have a large general stock. Among our specialities are Arts andCrafts, Architecture, Humanities, archaeology and greenland.
http://www.antikvar.dk/busck/

ABOUT / OM ...
CATALOGUES AND BOOK LISTS / KATALOGER OG BOGLISTER
ORDERING INFORMATION / BESTILLINGSOPLYSNINGER
ORDER FORM / BESTILLINGSFORMULAR ... SEARCH FUNCTION
updated / opdateret 10-04-2003
ABOUT / OM ARNOLD BUSCK ANTIKVARIAT We have a large general stock. Among our specialities are Arts and Crafts, Architecture, Humanities, Archaeology and Greenland. Business hours: Monday-Thursday 9 am-5.30 pm, Friday 9 am-7 pm, Saturday 10 am-2 pm.
CATALOGUES AND BOOK LISTS / KATALOGER OG BOGLISTER
The lists contain a small selection of our stock. ~ Listerne viser kun et lille udvalg af vores lager.
KATALOG 135, Maj 2001/
CATALOGUE 135, MAY 2001:
  • Danske forfatter-debuter/Danish Authors' First Book
    KATALOG 137, November 2002/
    CATALOGUE 137, November 2002:
  • Varia FRA VORES LAGER/FROM OUR STOCK:
  • Antikken/Antiquity
  • Arkitektur/Architecture
  • Baedeker
  • Bogbind/Book bindings ...
  • Greenland and arctica
  • HISTORIE/HISTORY:
  • Historiske kildeskrifter
  • Fremmed historie/Foreign history
  • Nordisk historie/Scandinavian history
  • Humor/Humour ...
  • Medicin/Medicine LITTERATUR/LITERATURE:
  • H.C. Andersen
  • 82. AU: Publications 1998 (hum/forhisto)
    Man, Culture and Environment in Ancient greenland. Justinianic era of South Scandinaviaan archeological Ravn, M. Historical archaeology, Textual archaeology
    http://www.au.dk/en/hum/forhisto/publ1998.htm
    @import url(/scripts/auie.css); @import url(/scripts/auie55.css); A-Z SEARCH HELP PÅ DANSK
    List of Publications Select year INFORMATION ABOUT: University of Aarhus Studies Research Faculties, departments etc. ... People and buildings Validated 01.08.2002 Publications
    PUBLICATIONS 1998
    Table of Contents
    Previous section

    Next section

    You can search for the publications in
    The Danish National Research Database
    THE DEPARTMENT OF PREHISTORIC ARCHAEOLOGY, MEDIEVAL ARCHAEOLOGY, ETNOGRAPHY AND SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY
  • Eriksen, B.V.; Straus, L.G. (Eds.): As the World Warmed: Human Adaptations Across the Pleistocene-Holocene Boundary Quaternary International , Oxford, 1998.
  • Fabech, C.: Kult og samfund i yngre jernalder - Ravlunda som eksempel. In:
  • . Callmer, J.; Rosengren, E. (Eds.), Halmstad: 145-160, 1997.
  • Lund, J.: Ginderup. Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, Band 12.
  • Limfjordsprojektet
  • Lund, J.: Variation og enhed omkring Limfjorden Limfjordsprojektet
  • TemaNord 1998: 513
  • Madsen, T.: GIS usage in Scandinavia. Archaeologia e Calcolatori 9.
  • Odense, 3: 39-45, 1998.
  • 83. Medieval North European Spindle Whorls
    Short article with descriptions of the spindles and whorls used by scandinavian yarn spinners from Category Business Textiles and Nonwovens History Machinery...... of spindle whorls from medieval scandinavia and areas of is a plate of a Greenlandwhorl almost Western Norway. Textiles in European archaeology Report from
    http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~capriest/spindles.html
    This document began life as an owner's manual for my husband's handmade reproduction Viking Age spindles. Little did I know how hungry people were for this sort of information! This document is a work in progress. It is provided as is without any express or implied warranties. While every effort has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the information contained, the author assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~capriest/spindles.html
    Medieval North European Spindles and Whorls
    Introduction
    This document discusses spindle whorls and shafts found throughout the areas Scandinavians lived in during the Middle Ages (800-1500 CE). Many hundreds of spindle whorls survive from the Scandinavian Middle Ages. In the Viking Age they were frequently buried with women, and throughout the period many were lost or discarded at settlement sites, only to be dug up centuries later.
    Materials
    The surviving whorls are made of many different materials: amber, antler (elk), bone (cattle, pig), clay, coral, glass, metal (iron, lead, lead alloy), and wood (oak). Many types of local stone were also used, such as chalk, limestone, mudstone, sandstone, schist, siltstone, slate, and soapstone. In Norway and Iceland, where soapstone can be quarried, and in the areas such as Scotland, Greenland, and Newfoundland that were influenced by Norway and Iceland, more soapstone whorls survive than whorls of any other material. Often soapstone whorls were made from reused fragments of cooking vessels.

    84. The Warp-Weighted Loom: Some Sources
    the Neolithic to the year 1000, excluding scandinavia. 2. Palestinian Institute ofArchaeology, Birzeit University Looms in Iceland and greenland Comparison of
    http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~capriest/wwloom.html
    This document is for the benefit of people who want to learn to weave on the warp-weighted loom. Last update was 17 June 2002. In addition to the bibliography, some of my favorite web picks are listed. Check out the links to historic weaving footage! In the four years since I first put up this page, information on the web about this subject has sprouted up like mushrooms. Two years ago, when I first used a web search utility to help me update this page, there were fewer than 50 links indexed. This time, I waded through nearly 350 links! This document is a work in progress. It is provided as is without any express or implied warranties. While every effort has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the information contained, the author assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein.
    Weaving on the Warp-Weighted Loom: Some Source Materials
    Books and Individual Articles
    Barber, E.J.W. "The Peplos of Athena," pp. 103-118 in Jenifer Neils, ed., Goddess and Polis: The Panathenaic Festival in Ancient Athens . Hanover / Princeton: Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College / Princeton University Press, 1992.

    85. Antiquity-September 1997
    societies in southern scandinavia Christopher Prescott. Eskimo cultures of Greenlandnew perspectives in Greenlandic archaeology Herbert Maschner.
    http://intarch.ac.uk/antiquity/vol71-273.html

    an international journal of expert archaeology
    VOLUME 71 NUMBER 273 SEPTEMBER 1997
    Highlights of this issue include:
    • on Lapita and the temporal geography of prehistory
    • on Monte Verde and the antiquity of humankind in the Americas
    • on Bronze Age myths? Volcanic activity and human response in the Mediterranean and north Atlantic regions
    • James H. Barrett on Fish trade in Norse Orkney and Caithness: a zooarchaeological approach
    New for this issue is supplementary material on this web page for Healthy but mortal: human biology and the first farmers of western Europe
    Here there is primary and supporting data to enlarge on the briefer statements made in the printed text.
    Contents
    Christopher Chippindale Editorial
    Reports
    John Waddell The Irish Discovery programme Archaeology and archaeometry: from casual dating to a meaningful relationship?
    Papers
    W.R. Ambrose Contradictions in Lapita pottery, a composite clone Christophe Sand The chronology of Lapita ware in New Caledonia Lapita and the temporal geography of prehistory Monte Verde and the antiquity of humankind in the Americas Bronze Age myths? Volcanic activity and human response in the Mediterranean and north Atlantic regions

    86. Mail Thread Index
    Re greenland's vikings, Geir Odden Skraelings and Red S. Knottnerus Re UnilingualScandinavia., Carl Edlund Haplogroup x, Geir Odden. archaeology projects in
    http://www.hum.gu.se/arkiv/ONN/2000/II/threads.html
    Mail Thread Index

    87. List_of_authors
    and markets in Northern Fennoscandinavia AD 1550 Schools in small settlements inGreenland The impact on Towards a self-reflecting archaeology Vágar, Vågan
    http://www.imv.uit.no/english/science/publicat/actaborealia/list_of_authors.html
    ACTA BOREALIA A NORDIC JOURNAL OF CIRCUMPOLAR SOCIETIES
    List of contents
    ACTA BOREALIA, 1984-1996
    Volume 1(1), 1984
    Bertelsen, R.: Farm mounds of the Harstad area. Quantitative investigations of accumulation characteristics. 7-25. Helskog, K.: The Younger Stone Age settlements in Varanger, North Norway. 39-70. Jahr, E.H.: Language Contact in Northern Norway. Adstratum and substratum in the Norwegian, Sami and Finnish for Northern Norway. 103-112.
    Volume 1(2), 1984 Engelstad, E.: Diversity in Arctic maritime adaptions. An example from the Late Stone Age of Arctic Norway. 3-24. Hansen, L.I.: Trade and markets in Northern Fenno-Scandinavia A.D. 1550-1750. 47-79. Nielssen, A.R.: Animal husbandry among the Norwegian population in Finnmark c. 1685-1705. 81-112.
    Volume 2(1-2), 1985 Proceedings of the Guovdageaidnu (Kautokeino) seminar on "minority research from the point of view of the humanities and social sciences" Mathiesen, P.: Comments on the Guovdageaidnu seminar. 3-8. Hansen, L.I.: Sami title to land in Southern Troms, Norway - Approach, method and data in reconstructing Sami rights of the past. 9-28. Thuen, T.: Acculturation and ethnic survival? 29-45.

    88. Viking Passage
    Columbus, the Norse sailed from greenland and built Associates on many tours to Scandinaviaand the Edinburgh, he studied prehistoric archaeology, followed by
    http://smithsonianjourneys.org/Cruises_Intl/081003viking.asp
    Search Smithsonian Journeys by: Departure Date April 2003 May 2003 June 2003 July 2003 August 2003 September 2003 October 2003 November 2003 December 2003 January 2004 February 2004 March 2004 April 2004 May 2004 June 2004 July 2004 September 2004 Interest Ancient History Archaeology Astronomy Civil War History Gardens Hiking/Walking History Military History Natural History Performing Arts Philosophy Sciences Trains US History Tour Type Christmas Tours Countrysides Cruises, Intl Cruises, US Essence European Stays Family Programs Festivals Hiking/Walking Holiday Programs Interludes Outdoor Adventures Private Jet Tours Sabbatical Seminars Trains Weekenders Destination United States Antarctica Argentina Ascension Australia Austria Belarus Belgium Brazil Bulgaria Burma (Myanmar) Cambodia Canada Canary Islands Cape Verde Chile China (Tibet) Cook Islands Costa Rica Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Easter Island Egypt England Estonia Falkland Islands Fiji Finland France Germany Greece Greenland Guatemala Holland Honduras Hungary Iceland India Ireland Italy Japan Kenya Laos Latvia Lithuania Mexico Mongolia Morocco Netherlands Norway Panama Paraguay Peru Poland Portugal Romania Russia Scotland Slovakia South Africa South Korea Spain Sweden Tahiti Tanzania Thailand Tibet (China) Turkey USA Uzbekistan Venezuela Vietnam Wales
    Aboard the Luxurious Seven Seas Navigator Summer in the northern latitudes is brief, an explosion of life and color. I invite you to experience this magical season as you visit the islands of the north Atlantic and trace the route of valiant Norsemen a thousand years ago. Travel in the company of convivial fellow Associates and expert study leaders who will enrich your cruise immeasurably.

    89. European Archaeology
    reviewed and annotated resources for European archaeology
    http://www.archaeolink.com/europe.htm
    Europe Home Return to Topic Page Albania Baltic Region ... Wales Albania ScienceDaily Magazine - Amid Albanian Turmoil... Political turmoil and physical danger aside, archaeologists are still working in Albania. The area they are surveying may be one of the largest open air stone age sites in the world. - From Science Daily Magazine - http:// www.sciencedaily.com/print/1998/12/981207072433.htm Archaeology of Albania Series of articles about Albanian archaeological subjects - photos - http:// www.geocities.com/paris/louvre/6820/art.html Pre-survey Investigations In the Area of Butrint... Article about pre-survey archaeological research at the Albanian city of Butrint. From the University of Wales - http:// archaeology.lamp.ac.uk/ Relocating the Caves of Luigi Cardini about locating prehistoric caves and surface sites which have been "lost" since exploration in the 1930s - illustrated - From the University of East Anglia - http:// www.shef.ac.uk/~capra/3/cardini.html Top of Page Return to Topic Page Baltic Region The Archaeological Excavations of Papinniemi in Uukuniemi, Finland About the excavation of a Greek Orthodox settlement in Finland. The settlement was abandoned 300 years ago - illustrated - From the University of Turku - http://

    90. TROMSO
    1976. Multidiscipline museum with scientific exhibitions in geology,zoology, archaeology, Sami ethnography and cultural history.
    http://www.scantours.com/tromso.htm
    Home Country Links Main Menu Rail Passes ... E-MAIL Scandinavian travel specialist since 1967 Travel Agents Click Here Denmark Norway Sweden ... FIND A TRAVEL AGENT
    IN YOUR AREA
    TROMSO
    Norway
    52,000 inhabitants
    Brief City History DESTINATION TROMSO
    Storgata 61-63, Tel.: 77 61 00 00, Fax: 77 61 00 10 Opening Hours:
    MUSEUMS AND SIGHTS
    Polaria
    Address: Hjalmar Johansensgt. 12, Tel.: 77 75 01 00, Fax: 77 75 01 11 A science adventure center based on themes related to the Arctic region and the Barents region. Spitsbergen videorama, Arctic rambling, aquarium and exhibitions are available to visitors. The cafeteria offers Arctic specialties. Opening Hours:
    May 1-August 31: Daily 10am-7pm
    September 1-April 29: 12pm-5pm Polar Museum
    Address: Sondre Tollbugt. 11, Tel.: 77 68 43 73, Fax: 77 61 16 20 The museum was set up in 1976 in Tollbodbrygga, a listed customs warehouse dating from the 1830s. The museum houses exhibitions of hunting and trapping, polar expeditions and research in the Polar Regions – especially in the northern hemisphere. Opening Hours:
    May 15-June 14: Daily 11am-6pm
    June 15-August 31: Daily 11am-8pm September 1-May 14: Daily 11am-3pm Northern Lights Planetarium Address/Location: University Campus in Breivika, Tel.: 77 67 60 00, Fax: 77 67 57 00

    91. Binghamton University Eng112G "Viking Sagas" Class Web Page
    THE VIKING SAGAS CLASS WEB PAGE.
    http://members.aol.com/jdowl33910/mine.html
    THE VIKING SAGAS CLASS WEB PAGE
  • WHY THIS PAGE IS HERE, AND WHAT YOU WILL FIND ON IT
  • RHONDA KNIGHT'S INTRODUCTION: WHAT THE CLASS HAS ENCOUNTERED AND THE PURPOSE OF THE CLASS
  • BOOKS AND SAGAS THIS CLASS HAS READ
  • LINKS TO OTHER VIKING SITES ...
  • FOLLOW THESE LINKS TO THE PAPERS STUDENTS HAVE WRITTEN FOR THIS CLASS
    WHY THIS PAGE IS HERE, AND WHAT YOU WILL FIND ON IT
    As a college freshman, one of my classes is called Viking Sagas , taught by Rhonda Knight. A class of 24 students, including myself, started this class at Binghamton University in NY in the spring of 1997 for different reasons. Some of us took it to fulfill requirements, others because it was expected to be an easy class and even others because the topic interested them. I believe I can speak for most of the class in saying that this class has proven to be not only interesting, but enlightening. And those of us who thought the class would be easy have found that there was certainly work involved. There have been several books the class has read, which you can find listed below. Also, a few of the Viking Sagas are available on the internet, and if myself or Rhonda finds this page, a link will be placed below for your reading pleasure. While outside research has not been the focus of this class, two six to eight page papers were completed by each of the students, as well as a final project, which were to be based upon our own knowledge, information we picked out of the discussions and lectures in class, but most especially on the books we read. The first paper was due after only one saga was read -
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