Ancient solar storm helped pinpoint the exact date Vikings settled in Newfoundland
HALIFAX — A groundbreaking study has confirmed Vikings had settled in a remote corner of northern Newfoundland by AD 1021, establishing for the first time a precise date for the earliest European habitation in the Americas — exactly 1,000 years ago.
The remains of the small Norse settlement at L’Anse aux Meadows were unearthed in 1960 by Norwegian explorer Helge Ingstad and his wife, archeologist Anne Stine. But the methods used to pinpoint the date of construction were imprecise.
Until this week, it was believed the Norse encampment was established around AD 1000 — a finding that prompted Canada’s easternmost province to stage an elaborate re-enactment and festival in 2000 called, “Vikings! 2000.”
That initial date of settlement was based on early radiocarbon dating techniques, the results of which were cross-referenced with analysis of the architectural remains and a handful of artifacts, as well as interpretations of Icelandic sagas written centuries after the Vikings had left the island.

