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Archaeology & History

Did the Viking 'sunstone' actually exist ?

By T.K. Randall
March 10, 2013 · Comment icon 11 comments

Image Credit: Jason Vanderhill
A mythical crystal said to be used by Viking sailors to help them navigate might have actually existed.
The sunstone is referenced in Norse mythology as a magical crystal that when held up would point sailors in the direction of the Sun even when it was obscured by clouds. One Icelandic saga tells of how King Olaf used one of the stones to locate the position of the Sun during snowy weather. But were the sunstones bound purely to the myths of old or was there a basis for them in reality ?

A mysterious crystal recovered from the wreck of an Elizabethan ship sunk off the Channel Islands is thought to hold the answer. While not a Viking era find, there is strong evidence to suggest that the object is the same type of stone that the Vikings would have used. Made from a calcite substance known as Iceland spar, the stone was found to be a remarkably precise navigational aid.[!gad]The sunstone is referenced in Norse mythology as a magical crystal that when held up would point sailors in the direction of the Sun even when it was obscured by clouds. One Icelandic saga tells of how King Olaf used one of the stones to locate the position of the Sun during snowy weather. But were the sunstones bound purely to the myths of old or was there a basis for them in reality ?

A mysterious crystal recovered from the wreck of an Elizabethan ship sunk off the Channel Islands is thought to hold the answer. While not a Viking era find, there is strong evidence to suggest that the object is the same type of stone that the Vikings would have used. Made from a calcite substance known as Iceland spar, the stone was found to be a remarkably precise navigational aid.
For centuries, it has been a crystal of legend locked in the verses of Norse myth with little or no evidence that it was ever real. Now it seems scientists at last have grounds for believing that the Viking “sunstone” used to navigate the seas did indeed exist.


Source: Independent | Comments (11)




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Comment icon #2 Posted by krypter3 11 years ago
This makes me think of the first episode of Vikings on the History Channel last weekend. The MC Ragnar was talking to his brother about how to find their way to lands to the West and first explained using the sun and shadows on a sundial like thing. Then his brother says, "Well what happens when it's cloudy?" Ragnar shows him a chunk of what he calls sunstone and looks toward the sun through the crystal and BAM! there's the sun. Because they are one in the same xD
Comment icon #3 Posted by MissMelsWell 11 years ago
Here's an actual picture of the stone.... I read this article earlier this morning. haha. http://www.komonews.com/news/national/Researchers-We-may-have-found-a-fabled-sunstone-196305941.html
Comment icon #4 Posted by pallidin 11 years ago
I guess I can understand it, a little bit... not much, though.
Comment icon #5 Posted by chopmo 11 years ago
I laugh when the try shoot holes in the theory by saying it's the only one to be found. Sooo... becuase Vikings and early Sea-travellers had a sence of worth not to discard of something so usefull as it was just another common item, it's fringe. It does what it's supposed to according to lore. Why shoot holes lol. I remember Viking lore, telling of their men being able to open the skys of Valhalla to assist them in their travels. It doesn't reference a sunstone directly, it still fits the shoe. A device to be guided by the heavens at all times.
Comment icon #6 Posted by marcos anthony toledo 11 years ago
The Sun Stones would be too valuable to be place in a burial so that why they not been found more often.
Comment icon #7 Posted by acute 11 years ago
Call me thick, but I don't understand what the article is saying. Is it saying that this form of calcite is rare, or to find some fashioned into a sunstone is rare, or discovering a Viking sunstone is rare?
Comment icon #8 Posted by DieChecker 11 years ago
I laugh when the try shoot holes in the theory by saying it's the only one to be found. Sooo... becuase Vikings and early Sea-travellers had a sence of worth not to discard of something so usefull as it was just another common item, it's fringe. It does what it's supposed to according to lore. Why shoot holes lol. I remember Viking lore, telling of their men being able to open the skys of Valhalla to assist them in their travels. It doesn't reference a sunstone directly, it still fits the shoe. A device to be guided by the heavens at all times. Just like the Romans had bazookas, because they w... [More]
Comment icon #9 Posted by Aus Der Box Skeptisch 11 years ago
I recall a similar article being posted within the last year .... Here posted by stillwaters http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=217031&view=&hl=&fromsearch=1
Comment icon #10 Posted by Aus Der Box Skeptisch 11 years ago
OK so it was longer than a year ago... oh well LOL
Comment icon #11 Posted by keithisco 11 years ago
This thread is becoming a bit boring... Icelandic Spar is well known and the Vikings would certainly be aware of its double diffraction qualities. When it became too dark to use the Spar then they had the Stars to be guided by, or if cloudy , then they could use the Lode Stone (Magnetite) to find Magnetic North. So please...Icelandic Spar in cloudy / twilight situations, then Lodestone / stars during night travels...heck, Lodestone by itself would give sufficient bearings to reach the landmass they were aiming for.


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