Did the Vikings use crystal 'sunstones' to discover America?
The Vikings became legendary for their seafaring
skills and their navigation methods have long been a subject for
speculation. The following is based on an article Steve wrote in “The
Conversation” in 2016.
Ancient records tell us that the
intrepid Viking seafarers who discovered Iceland, Greenland and
eventually North America navigated using landmarks, birds and whales, and
little else. There’s little doubt that Viking sailors would also have used
the positions of stars at night and the sun during the daytime, and
archaeologists have discovered what appears to be a kind of Viking
navigational sundial. But without magnetic compasses, like all ancient
sailors, they would have struggled to find their way once the clouds came
over.
However, there are also several
reports in Nordic sagas and other sources of a sólarsteinn “sunstone”.
The literature has sparked decades of research examining if this might be a
reference to a more intriguing form of navigational tool. Hrafins Saga
tells how King Olaf consulted Sigurd to find the position of the sun
during a snowstorm:
The weather was thick and snowy
as Sigurður had predicted. Then the king summoned Sigurður and Dagur
(Rauðúlfur's sons) to him. The king made people look out and they could nowhere
see a clear sky. Then he asked Sigurður to tell where the sun was at that
time. He gave a clear assertion. Then the king made them fetch the solar
stone and held it up and saw where light radiated from the stone and thus
directly verified Sigurður's prediction (translated
from Icelandic by Thorsteinn
Vilhjalmsson).
The idea is that the Vikings may
have used the interaction of sunlight with particular types of crystal to
create a navigational aid that may even have worked in overcast conditions.
This would mean the Vikings had discovered the basic principles of
measuring polarised light centuries before they were explained
scientifically and which are today used to identify and measure different
chemicals. Scientists are now getting closer to establishing if this form
of navigation would have been possible, or if it is just a fanciful
theory.
Scattering and polarisation
To understand how this might
have worked, we need to understand some things about the way light, and
particularly sunlight, can be affected. Light coming from the sun is
scattered and polarised by the atmosphere. This occurs when light is absorbed
and reemitted with the same energy by air molecules and by different
amounts depending on the light’s wavelength. The blue end of the light
spectrum is scattered more than the red, as explained in theory developed
by the British physicist Lord Rayleigh in the 19th century. Scattering
by particles in the atmosphere explains why the sky appears blue.
More importantly, scattered
light waves are also polarised to a certain extent. That means they
vibrate in one plane rather than in all directions at once. The amount of
polarisation a beam of sunlight undergoes depends on its angle to the viewer
and whether the light has been further scattered by cloud and other
particles that cause depolarisation.
Around the coastline of Norway
and Iceland are found crystalline chunks of calcium carbonate known as
calcite or Iceland spar. When polarised sunlight enters a calcite
crystal, something very interesting happens. Calcite is strongly
birefringent, meaning that it splits light passing through it into two
separate waves that are bent or refracted in different directions and with
different intensities, although the total intensity will be constant.
This means that objects viewed
through a calcite crystal appear in double. More importantly for our
purposes, the different intensities of the two light waves depends on how the
original light is polarised and the position and orientation of the
crystal compared to the light source.
Tourmaline and cordierite are
crystals with similar properties, except instead of splitting light like
calcite they are strongly dichroic. This means they absorb one component of
polarisation more strongly than the other. Again, the dichroic properties
depend on how the original light is polarised and the position and
orientation of the crystal compared to the light source. To see a
demonstration of calcite in action, click here:
Did the Vikings use crystal Sunstones to discover
America? Prof Steve Harding - YouTube
So, in theory at least,
examining how sunlight passes through one of these crystals –
and appropriately calibrated – could be used as a guide for sailors to
estimate the position of the sun. This could then allow them to determine
the direction of geographic north – even without understanding the
scientific principles behind these phenomena.
If we make the huge assumption
that the Vikings had these sunstone crystals on board their ships and,
more importantly, knew what they were doing with them, the question
is whether the difference in the light would be detectable to their eyes? And
would it be detectable with enough accuracy (after errors because of
imperfections in the crystals and depolarisation), to be used as a
navigation aid even in overcast conditions.
Testing the theory
The latest in an impressive
roster of publications on the subject recently appeared in Royal Society
Open Science, seeking to address this precise question. Gabor Horvath and
his colleagues looked at whether the optical signals from these three
types of crystal would be strong enough to be detected and with enough
accuracy to predict the position of the sun under a cloudy sky.
To do this, they simulated the
conditions, including the position of the sun, of a Viking voyage between
Norway, southern Greenland and Newfoundland. They found that in clear
skies, where the degree of polarisation was high, all three crystals did
show sufficient signal and good accuracy. In light cloudy conditions where
the degree of polarisation was somewhat reduced but still relatively high,
cordierite and tourmaline functioned better than calcite.
Only very pure calcite (with
optical impurities removed) performed to a similar level as the other two
crystals. If sunlight polarisation was very low, calcite appeared to give the
best results in predicting the sun’s position through clouds. And in
thicker cloudy conditions or fog, the errors of measurement became too
high for all three crystals.
Horvath’s team are now looking
at the further errors involved in predicting the position of geographical
north using this information. If the method does not work under
cloudy conditions when using the kind of imperfect crystals the Vikings
would likely have possessed, the whole theory is probably wrong. And on
clear days it would have been easier just to use calibrated sundials.
But if the researchers establish
that sunstones could have accurately been used to determine the direction
of geographic north, then the idea looks feasible. Then all that
will remain to finally prove this fascinating theory will be to find a Viking
ship with a calibrated sunstone in it. That, however, may take some time.
Did the Vikings use crystal 'sunstones' to discover
America? (theconversation.com)
The Conversation, January 29
2016. Article by Steve Harding.
Viking seafarers may have navigated with legendary
crystals | Science | AAAS
Science Magazine, April 3,
2018. Sid Perkins talks to Steve
The Crystals That May Have Helped Vikings Navigate
Northern Seas - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
New York Times, April 6, 2018.
Steph Yin talks to Steve
To find out how science can help
with an understanding of the Vikings, read “Science and the Vikings”:
Science and the Vikings: Amazon.co.uk: Harding,
Stephen: 9781527207066: Books

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