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Buildings with turf roof and walls, typical of rural buildings up to 1900 as there were few trees, Restored Farm Museum, Glaumber (Glaumbaer), Iceland
Museum courtyard Glaumbaer, open-air museum, sod yard, turf walls, grass roofs, wood facade, Iceland, Europe
Museum courtyard Glaumbaer, open-air museum, sod yard, turf walls, grass roofs, wood facade, Iceland, Europe
Living in the Middle Ages, interior view, wooden furniture, old sod house, turf and sod constructions, open-air museum, Skagfjordur Heritage Museum, GlaumbÊr, Glaumbaer, Iceland, Scandinavia, Northern Europe, Europe
Glaumbaer Museum, Icelandic turf houses, open air museum, turf-roofed houses, turf walls, wooden panels on outer front wall, Iceland, Europe
Open-air museum with cart, sod houses, turf and sod constructions, Skagfjordur Heritage Museum, GlaumbÊr, Glaumbaer, Iceland, Scandinavia, Northern Europe, Europe
Open-air museum with church, sod houses, turf and sod constructions, Skagfjordur Heritage Museum, GlaumbÊr, Glaumbaer, Iceland, Scandinavia, Northern Europe, Europe
Glaumbaer open air museum during winter, historic and traditional houses with sod roofs. europe, northern europe, iceland, March
American archeologists, Antonio Gilman and John Steinberg, take a core sample in a farmer's field near Glaumbaer in northcentral Iceland. Steinberg made an important discovery in Glaumbaer in 2001. He found the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
American archeologists, Antonio Gilman and John Steinberg, examine a test pit in a farmer's field near Glaumbaer in northcentral Iceland. Steinberg made an important discovery in Glaumbaer in 2001. He found the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Museum employee in period costume in front of an historic turf building at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
American archeologist John Steinberg examines a test pit in a farmer's field near Glaumbaer in northcentral Iceland. Steinberg made an important discovery in Glaumbaer in 2001. He found the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Historic turf buildings at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
American archeologist John Steinberg examines a test pit in a farmer's field near Glaumbaer in northcentral Iceland. Steinberg made an important discovery in Glaumbaer in 2001. He found the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Intyerior of an historic turf building at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Historic building at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Interior scene in an historic building at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Small church at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Historic turf buildings at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.
Cemetery at Glaumbaer, northcentral Iceland. An important discovery was made in Glaumbaer in 2001: the homestead of Thorfinn Karlsefni, the father of the first European born in the New World. This find has important implications for Viking history.