When I was in the fifth grade, my teacher asked me what I thought was an easy question.
"Who discovered America?"
"The Indians!" I replied.
My teacher frowned at me and asked, "No, what EUROPEAN discovered America?"
"Oh, Leif Erikson. He was a Viking."
Obviously annoyed, my teacher told me, "No! COLUMBUS discovered America."
"But the Vikings came here in the year 1000. Columbus didn't arrive until 1492."
"COLUMBUS DISCOVERED AMERICA!!!"
I learned two important lessons that day: (1) self-appointed experts are often wrong, and (2) showing you know more than an authority figure is a good way to get into trouble.
Growing up, I was always fascinated with the possibility that ancient civilizations in the "New" and "Old" Worlds had contact with one another. Ocean currents and trade winds make it fairly easy to cross the Atlantic. Surviving the voyage is another matter. Certainly, boats from one side of the ocean would occasionally get blown off course and end up on the other. Their crews would probably be dead by then and their arrival on a foreign shore would have had little effect on the civilizations that discovered their remains.
But what about ancient explorers? There was no shortage of civilizations with ocean-going capability: the Greeks, Romans, Phoenicians, Chinese, etc. Did they visit America? Did Native Americans visit Asia, Europe, and Africa?Continue reading The Kensington Runestone and other Viking mysteries in AmericaThe Kensington Runestone and other Viking mysteries in America originally appeared on Gadling on Fri, 16 Mar 2012 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments
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