**** The notion of “Blond Eskimos” created a sensation in the media. However, modern DNA analysis has since disproven any Norse ancestry. ****
I recall an article that surmised that the Vikings (farmers) couldn’t adapt to the little ice age while the Inuit (hunters, fisherman) did - or weren’t affected by it much. They further speculated (I have no idea how they would have any proof) that the Christian Vikings refused to participate with the Inuit hunts to their pagan rituals performed prior to going out to hunt or fish.
Would lend to the idea of them not marrying any Inuit either. Although it is surprising that over a few hundred years on Greenland, not enough Vikings strayed into an Inuit camp to leave a DNA footprint.
Perhaps the Inuit did things to keep their bloodlines pure (infanticide?).
The Black Death could have arrived there, by ship, and killed off most or all of the population, a phenomenon that is not unheard of elsewhere among medieval European populations.
It's not unlikely that the community was not large enough to sustain itself, either food-wise or breeding-wise, and as the weather worsened, give or take their small herds succumbing to conditions, they could have evacuated aboard one or more visiting ships. And they may not have had a choice, they may have been dragged off into slavery.
[snip] Niels Lynnerup, a forensic anthropologist at the University of Copenhagen who has studied Viking burial sites in Greenland, isn’t so sure. “I think in Greenland it happened very gradually and undramatically,” he tells me as we sit in his office, beneath a poster of the Belgian cartoon character Tintin. “Maybe it’s the usual human story. People move to where there are resources. And they move away when something doesn’t work for them.” As for the silence of the historical record, he says, a gradual departure might not have attracted much attention.
The ruins themselves hint at an orderly departure. There is no evidence of conflict with the Inuit or of any intentional damage to homesteads. And aside from a gold ring found on the skeletal finger of a bishop at Gardar, and his narwhal-tusk staff, no items of real value have been found at any sites in Greenland. “When you abandon a small settlement, what do you take with you? The valuables, the family jewelry,” says Lynnerup. “You don’t leave your sword or your good metal knife....You don’t abandon Christ on his crucifix. You take that along. I’m sure the cathedral would have had some paraphernalia—cups, candelabras—which we know medieval churches have, but which have never been found in Greenland.”
Jette Arneborg and her colleagues found evidence of a tidy leave-taking at a Western Settlement homestead known as the Farm Beneath the Sands. The doors on all but one of the rooms had rotted away, and there were signs that abandoned sheep had entered those doorless rooms. But one room retained a door, and it was closed. “It was totally clean. No sheep had been in that room,” says Arneborg. For her, the implications are obvious. “They cleaned up, took what they wanted, and left. They even closed the doors.” [/snip] Why Did Greenland’s Vikings Vanish? | Tim Folger | March 2017