Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Archaeologists are about to discover the lost Viking settlement.

Archaeologists are about to discover the lost Viking settlement.

The only known Viking site in North America is located in the Ansios grassland in Newfoundland. It was declared a World Heritage Site. Wendy coite/Shutterstock is a lost Viking settlement named "Hóp", which was mentioned in legends handed down hundreds of years ago. It is said that wild grapes, rich salmon and people who used animal skins to make canoes were once fed here. Now, a famous archaeologist says that this settlement may be located in the northeast of New Brunswick Province.

If Hóp is discovered, it will be the second Viking settlement discovered in North America. The other is at Ansox Ranch at the northern end of Newfoundland.

For decades, scholars have proposed possible sites for finding Hóp relics, including Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick (the east coast of Canada), Nova Scotia, Maine, New England and new york. However, an archaeologist narrowed Hope's possible location to the northeast of New Brunswick Province by using the description of settlements in Viking legends and the archaeological work of Anxi Oex Ranch and Native American sites on the east coast of North America. What is the most likely location there? Milla Mickey Shale Bay Area. [Photo: Viking settlement found in meadows, Anceaux]

Based on this research, "I put Hóp in the Mitch-Charrell Bay area of Milla," Bilgi Ta-Wallace, a senior archaeologist in Canadian Parks, told Life Science magazine that he had conducted extensive research on the Vikings in North Emerita. She said that Hewlett-Packard may not be the name of a settlement, but the area where the Vikings may have established several short-term settlements, and the exact location of these settlements changes every year. Wallace said that the story of pirates' voyage was handed down orally before it was written down. "Hóp" may be misunderstood as just one place, but it may involve several seasonal settlements.

Narrow down the search scope "KDSP”Wallace found that northeast New Brunswick is the only place that meets all the criteria. Legend of Hóp: There are wild grapes and salmon, barrier sandbars and local residents who use animal kayaks. "New Brunswick is the northern border of grapes, not the origin of Prince Edward Island or Nova Scotia," Wallace said, noting that no grapes were found in Maine.

In addition, "barrier sandbars appear on the coasts of [Prince Edward Island], Massachusetts and Long Island, but they are particularly dominant along the way." "The east coast of New Brunswick," Wallace said. Wallace said that there were abundant wild salmon in eastern New Brunswick at that time, but the study by archaeologist Catherine Carlson showed that no wild salmon was found in the former Columbus Native American site in Maine or New England. Micmac in the Mitch-Charel Bay area of Uz, Milla.

Kayak, Wallace said that the wild salmon in this area is very rich (before overfishing led to a decline in population in the last century), and micmac regarded salmon as a totem (a spiritual creature). ""The only area along the Atlantic that meets all the criteria for Saga is northeast New Brunswick, "Wallace told Life Science." There are also

Wallace said that the wood remains of three kinds of butter nuts and one kind of butter nut were found in the excavation of Viking settlement in Ansox Ranch, all of which originated in New Brunswick. They also revealed the existence of lime, beech, hemlock and elm-all of which can be found in New Brunswick.

This piece of wood may be part of the ship. It was found in meadows, Ansox, the only confirmed Viking settlement in North America. The pirate ship may sail from Anceaux Cox Ranch to Hope. Wallace said that finding HP, Wallace can narrow HP's position, but finding a real website will be difficult, maybe impossible.

HP can be used as