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Inger E Johansson
 
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Default Silver trade and Silver item from Vinland earlier Determining Geologic Sources of Native American Copper

Alan and other.
It's of no importance what so ever if the Vikings(up to 1050 AD btw) had or
hadn't contact with coconuts in Eastern Europe.
Accept facts:
* A silvered coconut bowl was collected by Ivar Bardson in Vinland North
America in 1360's as part of the Tiundetaka(the Greenlanders' name for the
tithes from the dioceses under Gardar See.
*It's one of two known silvered coconut bowl from NA.
* The silvered coconut bowl is documented by Pope's Cardinal to have been
delivered by hand of Ivar Bardson to the Collector in Stavanger. The
Cardinal was present.

There is no way you can flee from this. It's been known by the Papal Church
for 740 years.

Inger E



"Alan Moore" skrev i meddelandet
...
On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 03:57:26 GMT, "Martin H. Eastburn"
wrote:

Doug Weller wrote:

snip

I am also trying to track the silver monted coconut-bowl which were

among
the items Ivar Bardson delivered from Vinland as part of the tithes

from
Vinland. It may take some time to put all the lines from Stavanger to

Rome
together here. Seems as if it might have been sold in Flandern but I

really
hope not. More as soon as I have followed that one up.


Coconut bowl? Where can we read about this?

Doug


The Vikings were well known to trade goods with the people of Turkey.
They came down the rivers in Russia.

Coconuts last a long time and likely were stores on long trips once

traded for.

Yes, but I don't think they had coconut palms in the Middle East back
then. Just date palms.

Well a quick check reveals that they were available in Ceylon earlier
than that (introduced about 100 BC, according to
http://www.qub.ac.uk/bb/provan/pdf/2001c.pdf ) so the Arabs could have
brought some within the Viking range. They'd have been an expensive
curiousity more likely than an article of commerce, though. Carried.
overland, they don't last nearly as well as dates, raisins or rice,
all of which give better value for weight or volume.

Al Moore