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Citizen_of_H t1_ixn7gs1 wrote

Viking shipwrecks are immensely scarce. At least big ships. The Viking Ship Museum in Oslo showcase three ships, and that museum is a major tourist attraction because it is so unusual

Having said that 1300 is quite a long time after the Viking area

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cjboffoli t1_ixn831k wrote

That really is an excellent museum. I was so surprised when I looked closely at the boats there and noticed that the wood they used to build those ships appears to be quarter sawn. Had no idea the Vikings were so advanced.

I'm intrigued by the current renovations that they'll have when they reopen in 2026.

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ManlySyrup t1_ixnb0ba wrote

Quarter sawn?

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cjboffoli t1_ixze1eb wrote

A way of sawing lumber (diagonally, towards the center of a log, instead of just sawing flat) that crosses the grain in a way that gives you stronger, perhaps more dimensionally stable boards and often beautiful fleck and ray patterns. If you look closely at the Viking ships on display in Oslo at the Vikingskipshuset you can see patterns in the wood that are indicative of quarter-sawn lumber.

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_9EPZm2S5P2I/Rvmm7AD8GJI/AAAAAAAAAAk/4avY9mpznK0/s1600/medullarylrg.jpg

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http://www.hardwooddistributors.org/postings/what-is-the-difference-between-quarter-sawn-rift-sawn-and-plain-sawn-lumber

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Thebitterestballen t1_ixne5wc wrote

Yes, excellent museum. I found the most fascinating thing about the ships was they are constructed in the opposite way to almost any later ship. Instead of a solid frame with a hull fitted to the outside, they are a very strong but flexible hull, with the frame structure loosely hung inside on ropes.

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