Here’s the latest I can share based on current, reputable reporting up to 2026.
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The short answer: Norse (Icelandic/Danish-Norwegian) settlements in Greenland are widely regarded as having disappeared by the mid-15th century, with ongoing research refining the timeline and causes. Recent coverage highlights continued archaeological work and new interpretations about why the Eastern and Western Settlements were abandoned.[2][3][6]
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Key lines from current reporting:
- Archaeological sites in Greenland’s Eastern Settlement show evidence of farmhouses and burial activity, with scholars debating how and when the Norse left Eystribyggð (Eastern Settlement) for Iceland or other regions. New clues emphasize the complexity of their decline beyond a single cause.[2]
- A prominent Science/Science-affiliated discussion (and related coverage) continues to explore multi-causal explanations, including climate change (the tail end of the Little Ice Age), economic pressures (walrus ivory trade shifts), and social factors, rather than a single catastrophic event.[6][10]
- National Geographic and other outlets summarize the mystery with updated archaeological context, noting that by about 1450, the settlements were likely abandoned and that the historical record contains gaps about the precise departure route and fate of inhabitants.[2]
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Notable points of consensus and debate:
- Climate played a role, but not in isolation; access to resources and trade networks mattered, as did potential conflicts and demographic trends.[9][6]
- Some sources point to evidence of the Norse migrating toward other locales or ship-borne dispersal, but there is no definitive, singular exit point documented in surviving records.[3][2]
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Why this is still being updated:
- Greenland’s Norse remains are studied through radiocarbon dating, isotopic analysis of human and animal remains, and re-evaluation of historical sagas alongside material culture, leading to evolving narratives about their disappearance.[6][2]
Illustration idea (for quick context):
- A simplified timeline: late 10th century settlement establishment → 13th–14th centuries peak farming and trade → 1350–1450 gradual abandonment → 15th–16th centuries sparse European records and Inuit presence. This frame aligns with current scholarly discussion, though exact dates and routes vary by site.[3][6]
If you’d like, I can pull specific passages from the latest reports and provide a concise annotated bibliography with each claim cited. I can also summarize the latest archaeological site updates (e.g., Brattahlíð, Brattahlid-era remains) and show how interpretations differ across sources.