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Updated at 9:30 a.m. ET .

A mystifying Viking sundial rule in Greenland may have helped the ancient mariners sail at the same Union - south line of latitude across the Atlantic , unexampled research suggests .

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An artist’s impression of a Viking ship.

The study , detail Tuesday ( April 9 ) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A Mathematical and Physical Sciences , suggests that the raid Norsemen might have been even more impressive straw hat than previously believe .

" It is widely accepted that Norse mass were splendid sea dog . Now it seems they used much more advanced navigational instruments than we thought before , " said study co - generator Balázs Bernáth , a research worker at Eötvös University in Hungary . [ Fierce attack aircraft : 7 Secrets of Viking Culture ]

Mysterious artefact

The wooden artifact found in Uunartoq, Greenland may have been a 10th century sundial used for determining latitude on the Vikings' trans-Atlantic journeys

The wooden artifact found in Uunartoq, Greenland may have been a 10th century sundial used for determining latitude on the Vikings' trans-Atlantic journeys

Exactly how Vikings navigated the open seas has been the bailiwick of conjecture and folklore . Researchers think the Vikings used advanced sunshine compasses to find true north and swear on a"magic " crystal to sail on cloudy days . ( scientist recently unearth evidence of one of theseViking aventurine . )

In 1948 , an archaeologist discovered a mysterious wooden artifact under the ruins of a Benedictine monastery in a fjord in Uunartoq , Greenland , which wassettled by Norse farmersduring the 10th century . The artifact , shaped into a half - forget me drug , had a center golf hole and a zigzag engraved along its perimeter . Several lines had also been scratched onto the plate ’s interior .

Some sceptic argue it was a household ornamentation , but most researcher think it was an elusive Viking sunshine compass . Past researchers even require a similarly constructed grasp aboard replica Viking ships and tested its navigational spunk .

A man with light skin and dark hair and beard leans back in a wooden boat, rowing with oars into the sea

But navigational lines grade on the grasp were incomplete , so thisancient sundialwasn’t bang-up at find North . It was off by about one degree , which could lead to day of sailing in the wrong direction , state Amit Lerner , an ocean optic investigator at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem , who was not involved in the study .

Ancient mariners

That led the squad behind the young sketch to wonder whether the grasp had a more sophisticated primary function : decide latitude , or the compass north - south position on the orb .

Drone-level image of a field with a ring of post holes; there are recreations of vertical timbers shown in each of the holes. Six people stand in the top center for scale.

" Vikings execute line of latitude sailing , which means cover open sea along a chosen latitude . For example , they regularly voyage more than 1,600 miles [ 2,500 kilometers ] along the 61st latitude from Norway to Greenland and back . To do that one require a o.k. grasp or needs to regularly check his or her current parallel , " Bernath said .

But wind and ocean currents would have quickly diverted the Vikings ' small ships , forcing the gob to frequently tally their latitude to stay on course . While Arabian Panama used the wizard to check line of latitude , Vikings sail near theArctic Circle , where the sun never sets in summertime . So they must have navigated by the sun , not the stars , researchers reasoned .

The team found that at high noon every day , when the Dominicus is highest in the sky , a dial in the center of the compass would have range a shadow between two wrinkle on the plate . The ancient seafarers could have measure the length of that noon trace using scaling lines on the dial , and then determined the latitude .

An underwater view of a shipwreck in murky green water

But while the calculations of line of latitude and longitude may be accurate , there ’s no way to test their supposition , Lerner told LiveScience .

" Nobody can know for sure if it ’s rightful or not , " Lerner said .

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The two Viksø helmets were found in pieces a bog in eastern Denmark in 1942. Archaeologists think they were deliberately deposited there as religious offerings.

The newly-found longhouses were discovered by ground-penetrating radar, which can reveal buried objects and where the earth was disturbed in the past.

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