Records reveal that the vessel ultimately sank in the North Sea on April 29, 1788 Toria Sheffield joined the PEOPLE editorial staff in 2024. Her work as a writer/editor has previously appeared in ...
Oslo — Three 1,200-year-old Viking ships that have stood the test of time are embarking on their final and possibly riskiest journey to their new forever home in Norway. The first to make the move is ...
HER FUTURE UNCERTAIN. REPAIRS TO HER FAILING WOODEN INFRASTRUCTURE COULD COST AS MUCH AS $10 MILLION. AND SO WE’VE COME TO ...
The Oseberg longship – considered one of the most important historical discoveries of the Viking age — voyaged to its final destination last month. But the journey it took to get there was complicated ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The extremely fragile oak hull, encased in a heavy protective steel rig, began making the roughly hundred-yard journey on Tuesday.
Researchers were recently able to identify the whaling ship as the Earl of Chatham — formerly a naval ship — which sank in the North Sea on April 29, 1788 A schoolboy running along a beach in Scotland ...