Scholars examine Viking Life in Greenland through soil samples, music
Medieval History

Scholars examine Viking Life in Greenland through soil samples, music


A scientist and a composer are working together to explore a thousand years of Greenland's history through soil samples.

The project is called Exposure: Understanding Living in Extreme Environments. It examines Greenland's history, including the Inuit, Viking Settlements, and the modern communities, by using materials and data from the forensic examination of soils to explore human responses to environmental change. Soils record are investigated and revealed in different perspectives.

Images of soil samples gathered by Dr Paul Adderley have been set to audio by Dr Michael Young. Dr Young said: "Hidden in the soil is this story about people and the environment. We explore that."

The audio-video presentation is generated live by a specially built computer program. The presentation takes about 30 minutes to explore more than 1,000 years of human history.

Stirling University's Dr Adderley said: "We combine visual information gained from a forensic examination of soils from old settlements, with an understanding of how Greenland's environment has changed.

"The everyday farm-life of the Viking settlers is used to create the synthesis of the sounds heard. Michael and I hope that the work will cause the audience to reflect on the nature of these past communities and the extremes of environment which were faced by Viking settlers."

Dr Young, from Goldsmiths, University of London, said he had used audio from a variety of sources to create the science-art collaboration. Data obtained from the soil imaging is used as a source for generative audio and visual exploration: photomicrographs (and related contextual images) are processed and animated, and environmental sound recordings, in conjunction synthesized materials, are subject to real-time granular processing and dynamic filtering.



Click here to go to their website.




- How The Heavy Plough Changed The World
The world changed when a plough that could plough deep and turn over heavy clay soil was invented in the Middle Ages. Armed with massive amounts of data, researchers are now trying to document how a small technology leap turned the distribution of wealth...

- Greenland?s Viking Settlers Gorged On Seals
Greenland?s Viking settlers, the Norse, disappeared suddenly and mysteriously from Greenland about 500 years ago. Natural disasters, climate change and the inability to adapt have all been proposed as theories to explain their disappearance. But now a...

- Vikings Grew Barley In Greenland
A sensational find at the bottom of an ancient rubbish heap in Greenland suggests that Vikings grew barley on the island 1,000 years ago. The Vikings are both famous and notorious for their like of beer and mead, and archaeologists have discussed for...

- Shetland?s Viking Age To Be Explored In Research Project
A new research project is being set up to further explore the Viking age in Shetland, including the origins of the Norse settlers and when, and where, they first established their communities. The Centre for Nordic Studies, part of the University of the...

- Cfp: Medieval Landscapes Of Disease
Medieval Landscapes of Disease Kalamazoo, MI -- May 12-15, 2016 Following on a successful session last year, I'm offering another session on Medieval Landscapes of Disease this year at Kalamazoo. In recognition that diseases are manifestations...



Medieval History








.