American Indian Sailed to Europe With Vikings?

American Indian Sailed to Europe With Vikings?

From The Forgotten Timeline by Adidas Wilson

April 29, 2026 · 43 min

About this episode

The episode explores the possibility of a Native American woman traveling to Europe with Vikings, supported by genetic research and historical evidence.

Scientific research into Icelandic genetics suggests that a Native American woman may have traveled to Europe with Viking explorers roughly five centuries before Columbus. Researchers identified a specific maternal DNA lineage, known as C1e, which is currently found in a small group of Icelanders and shares deep roots with Indigenous American populations. This genetic discovery aligns with historical Norse sagas and archaeological evidence from Newfoundland, which document brief settlements and interactions with local inhabitants around the year 1000. While the sagas record the capture of Indigenous children, they do not explicitly mention a woman returning to Iceland, leaving her identity a mystery. This potential transatlantic crossing represents a significant instance of early human migration and bidirectional contact between the Old and New Worlds. Ultimately, the study highlights how genetic detective work can uncover forgotten chapters of history that traditional written records fail to preserve. "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". George Santayana

People in this episode

Host: Adidas Wilson

Topics covered

  • genetics
  • Vikings
  • Native American history
  • migration
  • archaeology
  • Norse sagas

Keywords

  • Icelandic genetics
  • C1e lineage
  • Indigenous American populations
  • Norse sagas
  • early migration
  • historical evidence

Mentioned in this episode

Places: Iceland, Newfoundland

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