A close up of a hillside next to a body of water

Viking Experience – UNESCO World Heritage site and recreated Norse village of Norstead

Discover your inner Viking at the UNESCO World Heritage site at L’Anse Aux Meadow.

  • A UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Experienced local guides
  • Interesting Viking history
  • Archaeological remains
  • Season

    Spring

  • Difficulty level

    Level 2: Moderate - some mobility needed

  • Duration

    4 hrs

  • Min. passengers

    10

  • Max. passengers

    200

  • Booking Code

    A-SAT1

  • From

    $ 166

  • Notices

    The transfer to/from St. Anthony to the site takes approximately 55- minutes each way. Basic yellow school buses are used for transportation. Warm, layered clothing and sturdy walking shoes are essential.

At the tip of Newfoundland’s Great Northern Peninsula lies the first known evidence of European presence in the Americas. A Norse expedition sailed from Greenland and built a small encampment of timber-and-sod buildings here over 1,000 years ago.  A 55-minute drive through coastal communities and forests with an abundant moose population takes us from St. Anthony to the UNESCO World Heritage site at L’Anse Aux Meadows. With a stunning backdrop of rugged cliffs, bog, and iceberg-dotted coastline (in spring), we explore the fascinating archaeological remains of the Viking encampment here. We first stop at the visitor center to view exhibits and then walk 0.6 mile to the archaeological dig. We also visit nearby Norstead Viking Village where we see Norse exhibits and hear ancient stories. Norstead also houses a replica of the Viking ship, Snorri, that Lief Eriksson sailed here on from Greenland.

 

Discovered in 1960 by Norwegian explorer Helge Ingstad, L’Anse Aux Meadows is the first authenticated Norse settlement in North America. This archaeological site at the tip of the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland contains the excavated remains of an 11th century Viking settlement consisting of timber-framed turf buildings that are identical with those found in Norse Greenland and Iceland during the same period. The site is thus unique evidence of the earliest known European presence on the American continent. 

Practical information

  • Booking Code: A-SAT1
  • Language: English
  • Not accessible for wheelchairs.
  • Walking Information: This excursions involves approximately two hours of walking over uneven, hilly, grassy ground.
  • Maximum participants: 200