Who Found America First: Columbus or the Vikings?

Who Found America First: Columbus or the Vikings?

From Disturbing History by Disturbing History-True Stories

April 26, 2026 · 1h 4m

About this episode

This episode explores who truly discovered America first, comparing the Norse settlers to Christopher Columbus.

A thousand years before Christopher Columbus saw a light on a Bahamian beach, a small band of Norse settlers stood on the northern tip of Newfoundland, swinging iron axes against fir and juniper trees, building sod houses that would still be visible in the grass nearly a thousand years later. We can name the year. We can name it down to a single twelve-month window. The year was ten twenty-one, and we know it because of a solar storm that struck the sun in the year nine hundred and ninety-three, leaving an invisible fingerprint in every tree growing on Earth that year. In this episode, we trace the long arc of who actually found America first, and the answer turns out to be more honest, more complicated, and more human than the version we got in school. From Erik the Red's exile out of Iceland, to his son Leif's voyage west, to the doomed colony at Vinland, to a Genoese sailor with a flawed map and an unshakable belief in himself, this is the story of how two halves of the world finally found each other again after fifteen thousand years apart. We dig into the sagas, the science, the forgeries, the discoveries, and the full weight of what it means to ask who got here first when…

Topics covered

  • Norse exploration
  • Columbus
  • history of America
  • Vikings
  • cultural contact
  • historical narratives

Keywords

  • Norse settlers
  • Vinland
  • Erik the Red
  • Leif
  • Columbus
  • history
  • solar storm
  • Newfoundland

Mentioned in this episode

Places: Newfoundland

More episodes of Disturbing History

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Disturbing History podcast page.