PBS?s award-winning Science series NOVA reveals what may be the first new Viking site discovered in NORTH AMERICA in over 50 years. A groundbreaking co-production investigating the truth behind the legends of the VIKINGS and their epic journey to NORTH AMERICA unveils the find and follows the search for evidence at what could be the furthest known point of the entire Viking expansion. NOVA?s 2-hour special, VIKINGS UNEARTHED, traces their dramatic exploits in Europe, their extraordinary voyages across the Atlantic and the incredible story of the new discovery.
The special, a co-production with the BBC, will first premiere online at pbs.org/nova, Monday, April 4, at 3:30pm ET/2:30pm CT, followed by the U.S. broadcast premiere, Wednesday, April 6 at 9:00pm ET/8:00pm CT on PBS. While infamous for their fearsome conquests, the VIKINGS were also expert seafarers, skilled traders, and courageous explorers who travelled far and wide from Scandinavia to Europe and into Asia. To date, we know of only one other Viking site in North America, found in the 1960s on the very northern tip of Newfoundland, at L?Anse aux Meadows. The discovery rewrote history; for centuries no one knew for sure if the Norse had actually made it to America, as suggested in the Vinland sagas. But are there more? Using satellite technology, excavation and investigation of archaeological evidence, space archaeologist Dr. Sarah Parcak (National Geographic Fellow, University of Alabama at Birmingham, and winner of the TED 2016 prize), archaeologist Douglas Bolender (University of Massachusetts, Boston), historian Dan Snow and a team of leading experts from around the globe have discovered, excavated and examined a new archaeological site at Point Rosee, located in southern Newfoundland.Videos