Sagot :
Réponse:
bonjour j'ai écrit en anglais ce n'est pas grave
L'Anse aux Meadows is home to the unearthed ruins of an entire Viking settlement that dates back to the 11th century; these are the first traces of European presence in North America. Located at the end of the Great Northern Peninsula, in the island of Newfoundland, this exceptional archaeological site contains eight turf and wood frame structures built in the style of constructions of the same period found in Norse Greenland and Iceland. It consists of three dwellings, a forge and four workshops on a narrow terrace overlooking a bog and a small stream, near the shores of Wreck Bay, in the Strait of Belle Isle. Artifacts discovered on site testify to various activities, including the manufacture of iron objects and woodworking, probably for the repair of ships. They also establish that the inhabitants of the camp made trips to the south. The excavated remains support the stories told in the Vinland sagas, which record the journeys of Leif Erikson and other Norse explorers who crossed the Atlantic Ocean from Iceland and Greenland to find and explore new territory – a remarkable milestone in the history of human migrations and discoveries.