| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
DOI: 10.1177/1461957107086123 The Oseberg Ship Burial, Norway: New Thoughts On the Skeletons From the Grave MoundUniversity of Oslo, Norway, per.holck{at}medisin.uio.no
In 1904, a Viking Age ship was found and excavated in Oseberg, on the west side of the Oslo Fjord, south of Oslo, Norway. The skeletal remnants of two females buried onboard were anthropologically examined during the inter-war years. Questions surrounding their identities have prompted much speculation, and many people like to believe that one of the women could be Queen Åsa, the grandmother of Norway's first king. When the skeletons were reburied in 1948, a few smaller pieces were held back and stored in the Anatomical Institute at the University of Oslo. Those fragments have now been radiocarbon dated at 1220±40 and 1230±40 BP. Their similar
Key Words: anthropology DNA Norway Oseberg ship Viking Age
|
13 = —21.6
/—21.0