The search for Arctic commodities led the Medieval Norse to the edge of the known world. Starting around the first half of the 9th century A.D, populations from Norway and the British Isles settled the North Atlantic islands. In the Faroe Islands, Iceland or Greenland, the Norse kept strong cultural, economic and political relationships with mainland Europe. For people whose originally come from Northern Europe, trees and timber are an essential part of their landscape, mythology and material culture. In the poorly wooded landscapes of the North Atlantic islands, they still managed to rely on wood and timber as a fuel source, a construction material for homes and boats, and in the production of tools and objects.
In this paper I will present a methodology which has proven useful providing answers as to the provenance of wooden materials used by Norse Greenlanders. In addition to using locally available timber, archaeological and historic sources have proven that the Norse also relied on imported materials, although it is still difficult to assess to which extent or how to identify areas of origin of these resources. Furthermore, there is a possibility that the origins of the timber used in the Norse Settlements could have differed according to aspects such as location, trade patterns or political connections between each area of settlement. Native, drifted or imported, wherever the timber used by Norse Greenlanders might have come from, the sea provided them with the materials they needed.