Norse Greenland

Viking ships on the water under the sunlight and dark storm Viking ships on the water under the sunlight and dark storm. Invasion in the storm. norse stock pictures, royalty-free photos & images

Moderator:

  1. “Which animals kept at either the Western or Eastern Settlements were the easiest and hardest to maintain?”
    • According to bones found in garbage piles, only the richest could afford to keep cattle. Beef was so rare because cows were hard to maintain, due to their diet consisting of large volumes of only grass that they were able to eat. Unlike the cows, goats could ingest almost anything and were more suited to Greenland’s climate. After cows, the second-best delicacy was caribou. Poorer folk fed on seal in times of hardship and goat and sheep were most common. Sandnes was the largest farm in the western settlement, and Gardar was the largest farm in the eastern Settlement.
  2. “How did the Norse and the Inuit or Dorset peoples fair? What attitude did the Norse have that kept them from learning from their neighbors?”
    • The Dorset people had moved on by the time the Norse had settled there. As for relations with the Inuit people that came a few decades after the Norse, they saw the Inuit as trespassers. The Greenland Norse were a violent, combative people prone to killing each other, who were also very conservative. Part of the reason this society collapsed was because they failed to adapt to their surroundings or learn from their more successful neighbors. If they weren’t so aggressive, they could have better sourced food, built better home structures that took less resources, built kayaks, or used fat for fuel.
  3. “What happened to the rate at which the crops were growing on the hillsides?”
    • This question is important because the steady decrease in available hay for the livestock was part of the reason the Norse starved to death. Environmental degradation, though overgrazing and turf cutting, on top of climate change, the beginning of the “Little Ice Age” which caused long cruel winters, together accounted for the starvation of the western and eastern settlements and the collapse of the colonies as a whole. 
  4. “How did you respond when the ships stopped coming”
    • The Norse people depended on imports such as iron, lumber, and tar to survive. Their chief exports were rare commodities like ivory. When the ivory trade opened back up in North Africa, walrus tusks became too much work to produce, and ivory fell out of novelty. The cease of ships also cut the Greenlanders off from European and Norwegian culture. The reading talks about how the Norse tried to keep up with European fashion and piety. Because of Norway’s stress on the importance of Christianity, hard labor and necessary materials which could have been used elsewhere for tools, a few large cathedrals like Gardar Cathedral in the Eastern settlement were erected.
  5. “How did Christianity play into your culture”
    • As mentioned in the last question, religion and eurocentrism walked hand in hand throughout the daily lives of the Norse people. Even the attempt to raise livestock like in Europe even though the landscape couldn’t sustain it shows this. Also, funds were put into churches which should have been put into the community. Lastly, during the steady collapse after the last bishop died, (bishops had always come from the mainland) there were no priests, and without priests there were no baptisms, burials, or marriages. People lost composure after this, with the addition of raids on the last available farms got rid of the last available food sources and the Norse starved to death.

Character 1: My name is Ahnah, a native Inuit, and wife to Tulok, a hunter in our tribe. We live in a small house far North of the Norse’s Western Settlement. While my husband is hunting, I am home caring for our 3 children, preparing and cooking the food that he brings home, and sewing skins for myself and my family as I learned to do since I was a child. 

When the Norse first arrived, we were hesitant to interact with them, and rightfully so, because they attacked a group of us to see how we bleed. Over the years we have tried to be peaceful and offer to trade with them, even teach them how to use our technologies, but they reject our offers. Our way of life has been very harmonious with nature: we only take enough from the environment to provide from ourselves while still trying to give back to the environment. We see the Norse trying to build their communities and support their people, but they are often taking so much from the environment that it can no longer produce what they need. They have been clearing the forests and cutting down our trees for centuries now, and we don’t have many trees left. It reminds me of when I saw the last tree on Easter Island die, it was like I could see that happening to our home, and now it is. We can see that they are struggling and hurting our environment, I wish they would let us help them. 

While the Norse have become more accustomed to the cold weather shifts, they haven’t changed their practices to adapt like we have. We know how to live in the cold and still collect food, but they are beginning to starve. It is clear that the reason they haven’t changed because they want to express their European culture, even to their own downfall. And while most of our food comes from the hunters in our tribe, some of the other mothers and I create small gardens in some of the warmer months of the year. Within recent years we have been experiencing some soil erosion which is decreasing our crop yield because the soil is dried out. Even though we haven’t been yielding as much, we are still largely successful in hunting, not struggling with providing enough food for our families. We enjoy our ways of life, we know how to survive and thrive. If the Norse were more friendly, then we could help each other. 

Character 2: The character I decided to choose has a traditional and a very distinct role in Norse society. He is a young farmer living in a longhouse (a small farm with several animal pens near it). His primary duty is to keep animals fed and grow enough crops for his family and cattle. Some of the farmers were involved into other activities such as: hunting, fishing, and harvesting. Norse farmer usually was standing on a good position in a hierarchical society. Being freeman granted them an access to the raw material and economic surplus that they gained from their fields and territory.

Hello, I am a Norse settlement living in the harsh arctic land named Greenland. Life here can be cruel and challenging even for the strongest of us. With severe climate and temperature changes varying from negative 50 during winter and positive 15 during the hottest days of summer. Our primary source of food includes hay, barley, rye, and oats during the warm seasons when the earth is suitable for farming. And animal meat during the cold seasons. Although, during the past several years the climate change started to emerge causing the temperature to fall. Making the farming season even shorter and leaving us with shortages of food and crops for animals. Outside of the farming concern we have faced another large-scale issue threatening our dominance in these lands. With an extreme depletion of natural resource our settlement soon ran into a problem of shortage of wood and lumber without which a production and extraction of iron bogs which were preserved in the ground would be highly problematic. By losing an ore deposit our people and territory became vulnerable to the Inuit invaders originating from Siberia and conquering territories of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland at fast rates. Soon we were exposed to regular raids and plundering. Some say Inuits were massacring the entire communities.

Overall, the Greenland’s End was a series of events.

Character 3: Hello, I am a member of the Norse society within Greenland. My family and I live on a small farm that is in charge of providing food for most of the people that live around me. While everyone does their part in growing food for their own families, our farm is the largest and most well kept out of everyone’s. Due to this a lot of other people come to me to trade crops with other substantial items.

Something that I have noticed while farming recently is that my crops are not being held well within the soil and they seem to be drying out. My land does not have many trees or shrubs on it due to them being consistently harvested for houses and basic tools. Personally, I do not own much lumber except for the tools I use to farm my crops. These days when I look around outside there does not seem to be many trees at all, just grass. This is really unhelpful because I had to do some recent repairs on my house by digging up nearby turf and placing it on my roof, due to the fact that I did not have any lumber to fix the holes that needed to be covered up. Recently my neighbor has been bothering me because they have been letting their sheep graze onto my property and they are trampling my crops and already terrible soil. A solution to this could be to build a fence around my property, but I do not have any wood to do so. When the sheep step on the soil it breaks up my grass and blows the grass and dirt all over the place. I am running out of healthy places to plant my vegetables. Although that one neighbor sucks, I have a few that really help me out when I am having bad growing seasons by giving me food that their family has hunted. Because of this I usually give them extra vegetables when I have a good season. Up until recently, I have had nothing but bad growing seasons due to the fact that the land is slowly deteriorating.

Character 4: My character is a young girl who has a lot of responsibility in the Greenland society despite her age. Young children had to learn many abilities in their childhood to be able to help their families and pass on as they got older.

Wondering if we would be able to eat everyday was always a thought that we had. It was hard enough already for us to get food for ourselves but having enough food for the cattle was just as hard. The cattle liked to eat grass, but my brothers and all the other men here were always cutting the turf from the ground to put around our house to keep us warm. We did not have good materials to make a strong, warm house. So, after some years, my brothers would have to put new turf on our house since the old turf would break down after a while. Keeping the cattle healthy was always a big responsibility. Once I milked the cattle, I would store the milk to help my mom make cheese. To keep the milk from going bad, we had to wash the milk twice a day by boiling it with water. Learning how to weave and spin wool, care for the cattle and sheep, and make butter and cheese was something I have been doing for a long time now.

We only had a few cattle and sheep, unlike the wealthier people of our village. Therefore, my brothers were always hunting seals, however, after a while, it was hard for my older brothers and father to even catch any seals, let alone find any. I think their method of catching seals could have been better. They could have started hunting other animals like fish or different types of whales. My brothers were also responsible for resharpening knives, even if they were already so small. This is because we did not have enough iron, as well as lumber. Many of the trees had already been cut down for firewood. They then had to start using turf to use as fuel. The vegetation was ruined and the soil was bad. If my brothers and father had learned new ways to hunt, taken care of the vegetation better, or started trading with other people near us, maybe we could be in a better position.

Character 5: My Character in the Norse society was a woodworker with a small family. He came from a family of woodworkers and the skills were passed down from my father. He is trying to teach his son the same skills his father taught him.

As a woodworker in the Norse village, I spend most of my time helping build houses and furniture for the rest of my village. My father had a much easier time than I did because of the decreasing supply of timber in our village. The moment we decided to burn the trees down to make room for farms and pastures I knew we were making mistakes, but that’s what the clergy and chiefs wanted. The lack of wood also made it hard to heat our homes because it always seemed to get colder and colder. I often had to decide between using driftwood for making money and keeping warm in the cold season.  I often wondered whether the chiefs and clergy knew what was best for us, I knew I shouldn’t think that way but sometimes it was too hard not to.

I always thought to myself that maybe I could trade my crafts with the nearby natives, but our chiefs were always against that idea and would always rather trade with Europe but never traded the things we really needed, it was always luxuries and jewels. But over the course of my life the trade with Europe slowly stopped and our lives became more and more difficult. The Natives were always nice to us and always offered to help me when our paths crossed, but our society’s rules were strict, and my superiors never wanted their help.

Character 6: My name is Estrid Johansen. I came with my husband, Ragnar, to the New World. We are part of a settlement to establish the Norse people in the New World. As a housewife, I tend to the household duties. I milk the cows, graze the sheep, spin wool, and make the food. I also have the duty of showing the young girls in the settlement how to become proper wives by teaching them the necessary skills.

Our hardships began when Ragnar came back from a hunt with the rest of the men. He described these skraelings that they encountered. They had boats made of skin, weapons with sacs on them, and sharp stone tools. He stabbed one of the skraelings and told me with uneasy that they do not bleed unless they are fatally wounded, that the wounds turn white. The skraelings became aggressive, and the men retreated back to the settlement.

Soon the men began coming back with less food. They could not find any caribou, only hares. The weather here does not allow for good farming; we were running out of hay for the livestock. The men attempted to hunt into the fjord for seals and fish, but the skraelings prevented them from going any further. We had to resort to eating the livestock, and even out own hunting dogs. Now, we have nothing left. We are starving. We were promised ships from our homeland, but it has been years since the last one. We are losing hope.

Trains of Thought

By: Anonymous

Preface: I am attempting to write in a unique format to show how our minds (or at least mine) works while in a mediated environment and while in a natural setting. In my reflections, I hope to recognize if there are different trains of thought in these two very different settings and how I enjoy each time.

It’s Monday night, and I’m about to start my 1 hour in a mediated environment. I’m on my phone for probably the 6th time today, about to go through each app.

10:00 pm. First Facebook. 9 new notifications, not too many. Okay there are some posts to the GMU Generalposting group I am in, some comments on a post I made a week ago, and there are some new items for sale in the marketplace. First the GMU group. People are looking to buy used textbooks, oh wait, I might have that one! Never mind, I already sold that last year. Scrolling and scrolling, there are posts wishing good luck this semester, some part-time job opportunities… nothing looks interesting. Going to the comments on my post. Aw some family members saw it and commented, they’re so sweet. Wait, only thirteen likes? Ugh, I wish more people liked my post. You know what, it’s fine, it doesn’t matter, ‘remember I only post to share with my family I don’t get to see, so they can see what I’m up to’. Let’s see what’s up for sale. Ooh my aunt posted something 2 hours ago, oh my gosh, it’s already sold! How does she do that? I wish I could do that; I should talk to her. Back to the homepage. Scrolling again. OH MY GOSH. I hate seeing my old friends post about how they are married or engaged and having kids already. I wish that were me. Why did I have to go to school? Why couldn’t I have just stayed back home and found someone nice to settle down with?! I guess thinking big means not getting what everyone in a small town has and wants. Being here is so frustrating sometimes, it takes so much work, and I barely have time for a social life. Part of me loves that I decided to chase my dreams, other times part of me hates that I didn’t just conform. Okay, I’m getting too depressed, next app.

10:17 pm. Let’s try Instagram. Yeah, I just posted a week ago, I wonder how many likes I have! Only seven? That’s how many likes I had the day I posted. I thought people liked my photography. I mean I know it’s not amazing, but I think I do rather good. Fine, homepage. Aww cute dogs! Boring, boring, keep scrolling. More dogs! Okay I’m bored, let’s go to reels. God I’m going to spend forever on here, it’s like TikTok. So many relationship videos, I love these. Wait, why can’t my relationship be like this? Why do I even follow these pages and people if it just makes me sad about the love I have. STOP. I can’t think like this. Okay, I’m done. Wow that was probably the shortest amount of time I’ve spent on Instagram.

10:22 pm. Snapchat. Okay, no new messages, that’s disappointing. I’ll just go to the Stories section. Oh! I have to watch the animal videos. Some pets are just so weird, and that one dog that looked like Bailey. I miss Bailey, she was my best friend, I can’t wait to get another dog just like her. Stop being sentimental, no tears. Beauty hacks next. Why do I even watch the beauty videos, I can never accomplish any of this anyways? I always try and it never works out. The cleaning videos, those are always super helpful. Okay, okay I think I’ve learned some things. And skip the relationship videos. Oh, an Olympics recap video, golden moments. I haven’t kept up, I should watch this, wait are the Olympics still happening? When did the U.S. win so many medals? And what happened to Simone Biles, why is everyone trashing her? When did I start saying “trashing”? God, I sound like my sister. Next app.

10:37 pm. Outlook. Gosh, I have to go through my school email. I went through this yesterday, how do I already have 41 new emails? Okay start at the top. Class reminders, move them to “Current Courses” folder I made. Keep going, sort, sort, sort. Well, no new news. Done.

10:45 pm. Switched to the computer. Let’s pull up CBS News. So much news! ‘Adapt or Die’, I wonder what that’s about, I’ll go back later. ‘Fire approaches Lake Tahoe’, well that seems important, wait, where is Lake Tahoe? Quick Google search: Lake Tahoe is between California and Nevada. I should watch this, mom used to live out there. It’s only a 2-minute read. Oh my god, this fire is burning more than 191,000 acres?! I can’t believe it. AND it is only 15% contained, I wonder what they are doing to control it, why isn’t it working? How did this fire even start?  There’s another fire happening at the same time! 807,000 acres! All the fires we’ve had lately, there’s going to be nothing left! This is so sad, mom used to talk about how she hiked out in California all the time, I wonder if any of the places she went to will be left? Okay let’s go under the Science section. Hurricane Ida, COVID, California fires, this is different… ‘4-year-old girl discovers rare stingless bees in California’. Let’s read it. I saw so many bees outside today, I wish I didn’t get scared about them stinging me. Aw this story is so sweet, this kid re-discovered these bees that were never even named and thought to be extinct, and she won’t tell anyone where they are so they can stay undisturbed. And the county and state departments are happy to learn about the little girl and her discovery.

Okay, the clock just struck 11:00 pm. I guess I’m done. This will probably be the shortest amount of time I’ve spent on social media. I mean, I still have so many other apps I usually go through. Well, the next part is spending 1 hour in nature. I’m going to do that tomorrow morning.

Okay it’s 12:00 noon Tuesday. I am in a backyard in Clifton, Virginia, about to start my 1 hour in nature. I am all geared up in a raincoat, rain boots, and carrying an umbrella because it is currently raining and really dark and dreary outside. Surprisingly it’s still hot and humid though. I’ve walked further into nature and sat down under a tree so it’s not raining as hard on me, but I still have the umbrella propped over my head.

First, I work on identifying all of the sounds I hear. Rain: hitting the tops of the trees, splashing into the puddles on the ground, dropping into the nearby creek. Thunder and its’ lightening: only every so often, but when the thunder cracks or the lightning bolts, it’s like a gunshot being fired into the sky with its’ sound travelling straight through my chest, leaving me trembling. Birds: chirping quietly from all directions (even right above me), calls of little chicks wanting food from their moms, even lone birds singing into the open air waiting for a reply. Cicadas: their buzzing almost tunes with the pauses of the thunder. Frogs: just a few from a far, maybe from the little creek nearby, with deep and bellowing croaks as if to indicate the heaviness of the air suppressing us. Rustling: from rabbits or squirrels running through the wet fallen leaves to find their hiding spots from the storm.

I take in all of these sounds, and then I hear them all together, as if nature has its own rhythm of the world, its own beat to which it operates. As I settle into my hiding spot, I truly begin to be immersed in nature. I see some of those birds I heard, fly by. A frog jumps past. A rabbit goes into its’ hole. A squirrel climbs up its’ tree. And even some bees circle around me before moving on.

I begin to just relax and try not to think. Something about the sounds of nature is just so calming and peaceful. It allows you to relax your mind without even trying. It is as if my soul is connected to the nature around me and we become harmonious. My heartbeat syncs with nature’s rhythm, my breathing slows, and my eyes close. I no longer startle when the thunder cracks or the lightning bolts. I’m not worried any more about the animals or the bugs. I could spend forever out here.

In the brief amount of time I got to spend outside, I realized that somehow, I have never felt this way before. Any time I had tried to spend in nature previously, was interrupted by my dislike for bugs or the uncomfortableness of the ground. But this was different. I was different. Somehow, I just connected, and it was incredible. I definitely prefer to be outside more than on my devices. 

Agricultural Revolution

The luxury trap: agriculture improvements.

By Camila Veizaga

The luxury trap is a phenomenon that started about 10,000 years ago (Wu, 2017). It initiated when humans transitioned to not only cultivating crops, but more important, invented new ways of domesticating them (Harari, 2014). This human-environment interaction shows how small improvements in agriculture that were meant to make life easier, accumulated over time, are needed luxuries with unforeseen consequences. The resource system is the land of Natufians’ descendants in the Middle East and the resource units are the crops produced, cereals in specific. The resource system and units changed the social-ecological system by providing food, determining population growth, giving rise to sedentary lifestyle, and stablishing class hierarchy.

            New agricultural techniques and improvements, created new actors through class hierarchy, such as foragers and farmers. As population increased, more farmers were needed to produce more crops and expected to work harder. While, others would adopt roles that did not require as much as work and labor, such as securing food storage.

            New agricultural techniques meant having more food and determined population growth. Having more and more people played a key role in the community’s health and created class hierarchies. As population increased, food production would also have to increase. However, because the number of children was greater than adults capable of working in the field, there were times where people, especially children, would starve. As the mortality rate of children would increase, the more food the community could store for better times. In addition, good times would lead to girls reaching puberty early in life and having more children, increasing population and, consequently, demanding more food.

            The luxury trap describes how society invests or discovers new ways of living a better life, without realizing that these new ways come with new problems. These unforeseen problems require new approaches that create new issues. And like that, our society relies on these new ways and approaches on solving unintended consequences.

Reference

Harari, Y. N. (2014). Sapiens: A brief history of humankind. Random House.

Wu, Z. (2017). The luxury trap. Rochester Institute of Technology.

It’s a trap! Wheat, the original Luxury trap

By Bailey Price

The agricultural revolution started around 10,000 years ago. 90% of the calories we consume today came from a period of domestication lasting from 9500BCE to 3500BCE. It was during this time that humans learned to manipulate the environment around them, they controlled the life cycle of plants and animals to better suit their needs. They selected advantageous genes in both flora and fauna. However this process could only be done with species that were easy to domesticate.

In this situation the resource system is the local environment. The units are the plants and animals that were selectively bred for better production. Humans cultivated these crops and livestock animals which provided readily available food that was grown close by, they allowed humans to settle in one place instead of being wanderers. Wheat especially allowed populations to boom and for communities to begin and grow. Unfortunately switching to this grain staple diet negatively affected these new villages, for example, diseases were more rampant with more people in close quarters.

As people continued to gather together to grow crops, small communities grew into villages which grew into cities. The surplus of food provided by the agricultural revolution led to social hierarchies among the large amount of people. People stepped up to control the flow of goods and to govern one another. Village headmen turned into town mayors and rulers of kingdoms as the wheat fields grew over the continent. These rulers controlled the surplus of food, not to redistribute it to their constituents but to create wealth to fund their politics and wars and to build their cities as monuments to themselves. Despite this, humanity benefited from the joining together. Stories and myths were shared, crafting techniques spread, and cultures mixed to create a thriving society.

The agricultural revolution had many different effects on humanity. It spurred economic development by forcing people to create farming communities that grew into wealthy kingdoms. It also heavily affected demographic trends, with dramatic shift in how people lived, going from small nomadic tribes to bustling permanent settlements that had exponentially growing populations. However none of this could have happened without the change in climate patterns. When the last ice age of the time ended temperatures increased as well as rainfall. This allowed for the increased growth and spread of wheat, which became one of the most prominent part of the hominid diet.

The outcomes of this revolution were, well, revolutionary. Much more food was now available to people, causing a dramatic population spike that would not be rivaled until the industrial revolution. However the diet of farmers was worse than that of their forefathers the hunter gatherers. Babies immune systems were weakened after birth from lack of milk because their mothers had to spend more time in the field growing the precious crop. Despite this, evolutionary success is not based off of the general health of people, it is based off of population size and reproduction rate. That is why this era was successful, in that there was an increase in foodstuff that filled bellies and allowed for procreation, not for increased quality of life.

Reference

Harari, Y. N. (2014). Sapiens: A brief history of humankind. Random House.

Art Reflects Life

Erin Lager

Being a hobbyist digital artist, I have strong opinions on art. For the sake of this blog post, I will be describing art as any creative medium of human expression. Naturally, this definition applies to video games as well. Therefore, I decided I’d spend my hour of media consumption playing an indie game titled Darkest Dungeon by Red Hook Studios. It is described as a challenging, roguelike turn based rpg, and features a washed-out, gothic art style. I immediately fell for the game’s atmosphere and mechanics. Unlike most conventional rpgs that follow a party system, the heroes I employ for dungeon expeditions are not well-adjusted people. They are drunks, thieves, and sexual deviants. They get stressed after witnessing death and bloodshed and react irrationally when pushed to their limit. When a hero dies, they are gone forever. You can’t heal or resurrect them. Despite the gothic fantasy setting, it feels very grounded in reality because of this.

I spent an hour outdoors in my backyard. It was a very nostalgic experience because I played in this backyard often as a 10-year-old girl, one of my favorite pastimes was catching and observing insects. So, I decided to repeat this experience as a 22-year-old woman. Because it’s late January, there weren’t many insects outside, but I did observe a pair of cardinals searching for earthworms, and a squirrel frantically digging up a nut. It was relaxing watching life around me go about their daily business. I could hear numerous birds in the trees above me, and a dog barking in the distance. I think I heard the repetitive tapping of a woodpecker, but I couldn’t confirm if that was the source of the noise.

Overall, I think the takeaway from this experience is that survival is something incredibly essential to all forms of life. Animals are very instinctual creatures; they react to the world around them from a basis of survival and eventual reproduction. Similarly, humans aren’t too different in that we are very reactionary creatures. I think the video game I played was a good reflection of humanity’s basic responses under copious amounts of stress. The world is flawed, we are flawed. Nothing is perfect and everything around me will one day cease to exist, it will wilt and die and there is nothing I can do to prevent that.