Abstract

The settlement of Iceland in the Viking Age has been the focus of much research, but the composition of the founding population remains the subject of debate. Some lines of evidence suggest that almost all the founding population were Scandinavian, while others indicate a mix of Scandinavians and people of Scottish and Irish ancestry. To explore this issue further, we used three-dimensional techniques to compare the basicrania of skeletons from archaeological sites in Iceland, Scandinavia, and the British Isles. Our analyses yielded two main results. One was that the founding population likely consisted of roughly equal numbers of Scandinavians and people from the British Isles. The other was that the immigrants who originated from the British Isles included individuals of southern British ancestry as well as individuals of Scottish and Irish ancestry. The first of these findings is consistent with the results of recent analyses of modern and ancient DNA, while the second is novel. Our study, therefore, strengthens the idea that the founding population was a mix of Scandinavians and people from the British Isles, but also raises a new possibility regarding the regions from which the settlers originated.

Highlights

  • The permanent settlement of Iceland was one of the key events of the Viking Age, the period of northern European history between the mid 8th and mid 11th centuries CE that featured widespread raiding, trading, and colonisation by Scandinavians [1,2,3]

  • We sought to shed light on this issue by analysing 3D shape data recorded on the cranial bases of archaeological human remains from Iceland, Scandinavia, and the British Isles

  • The first concerns the percentage of immigrants of Scandinavian ancestry versus the percentage of immigrants of British Isles ancestry in Iceland’s founding population

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Summary

Introduction

The permanent settlement of Iceland was one of the key events of the Viking Age, the period of northern European history between the mid 8th and mid 11th centuries CE that featured widespread raiding, trading, and colonisation by Scandinavians [1,2,3]. Perhaps the most important of these is the composition of the founding population.

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