Skip Navigation

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Norse Greenland settlement: Reflections on climate change, trade, and the contrasting fates of human settlements in the North Atlantic Islands

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Dugmore AJ, Keller C, McGovern TH
2007
Arctic Anthropology. 44 (1): 12-36

Changing economies and patterns of trade, rather than climatic deterioration, could have critically marginalized the Norse Greenland settlements and effectively sealed their fate. Counter-intuitively, the end of Norse Greenland might not be symptomatic of a failure to adapt to environmental change, but a consequence of successful wider economic developments of Norse communities across North Atlantic. Data from Greenland, the Faroe Islands, and medieval Iceland is used to explore the interplay of Norse society with climate, environment, settlement, and other circumstances. Long term increases in vulnerability caused by economic change and cumulative climate changes sparked a cascading collapse of integrated interdependent settlement systems, bringing the end of Norse Greenland.

Expand Abstract

Resource Description

    Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Food Security, Human Conflict/Displacement
    • Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Food Security, Human Conflict/Displacement: Landslide
    Polar
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Non-U.S. North America
    General Health Impact
    Research Article
    Adaptation
    • Adaptation: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Resilience
Back
to Top