Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Judge won’t block Meta from axing workers who filed AI discrimination lawsuit

Judge won’t block Meta from axing workers who filed AI discrimination lawsuit

July 17, 2026
Dem-run ‘Dear White Staffers’ X account joins calls for ICE to kill anyone in Epstein files

Dem-run ‘Dear White Staffers’ X account joins calls for ICE to kill anyone in Epstein files

July 17, 2026
LeBron James denies a 76ers hint after ‘trust the process’ comment

LeBron James denies a 76ers hint after ‘trust the process’ comment

July 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Judge won’t block Meta from axing workers who filed AI discrimination lawsuit
  • Dem-run ‘Dear White Staffers’ X account joins calls for ICE to kill anyone in Epstein files
  • LeBron James denies a 76ers hint after ‘trust the process’ comment
  • Polymarket promo code NYPMAX: Deposit $20, get $50 for college football markets
  • RNA can form large 3D structures, suggesting a new role for the molecule in the origin of life on Earth
  • WHO updates dementia guidance: a new risk factor, supplements to avoid and a hearing loss must
  • Exclusive | Stew Leonard’s lettuce sales drop 11% during cyclospora outbreak, prompting promotion of ‘safer’ greenhouse greens
  • States must take election security steps or lose federal funding, Trump admin vows in latest push to pass SAVE America Act
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Scurvy-plagued whalers’ remains discovered at ‘Corpse Point’ on Arctic island
Scurvy-plagued whalers’ remains discovered at ‘Corpse Point’ on Arctic island
Science

Scurvy-plagued whalers’ remains discovered at ‘Corpse Point’ on Arctic island

News RoomBy News RoomMay 20, 20262 ViewsNo Comments

Archaeologists investigating a 17th-century graveyard in the High Arctic are uncovering evidence of the perils that plagued early modern whalers, including extensive physical labor in their jobs and diseases such as scurvy. But the burial site is disappearing rapidly due to climate change, making archaeological excavations a race against time.

Likneset, which means “Corpse Point” in Norwegian, is the largest whaling burial site on Svalbard, an archipelago halfway between the North Pole and the northern coast of Norway. Hundreds of shallow graves marked with stone cairns have been found there in a cemetery that dates to the 17th-to-18th-century boom in Arctic whaling.

In a study published Wednesday (May 20) in the journal PLOS One, archaeologists examined 20 burials from Likneset and found that the men buried there lived short, difficult lives — and that these burials are at risk of disintegrating due to climate change.


You may like

“Early modern Arctic whaling was among Europe’s first large-scale extractive industries, and the labor was highly manual,” study first author Lise Loktu, an archaeologist at the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research, told Live Science in an email. Loktu co-wrote the study with Elin Therese Brødholt, a forensic anthropologist at Oslo University Hospital.

The work carried out by the whalers was extremely physically demanding, involving tasks like rowing boats, hauling live whales, towing carcasses, processing blubber, and performing heavy shipboard work under cold, wet and physically exhausting conditions.

“What is striking in the skeletal material is that we can actually see this workload reflected in the body,” Loktu said.

In their analysis of the whalers’ skeletons, Loktu and Brødholt found evidence of degenerative joint disease, trauma, and extensive strain in the men’s shoulders, upper chest, spine, hips, knees and feet.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

“Several very young adults already show advanced wear and degeneration normally associated with much later stages of life,” Loktu said, suggesting these men were overusing their bodies for a long period of time.

The vast majority of the whalers also had evidence of scurvy, a deficiency of vitamin C that leads to muscle weakness, bleeding gums, tooth loss, anemia and a host of other problems. Scurvy is rare in modern countries where fresh fruit and vegetables are available, but it frequently affected sailors on long-distance journeys in the 15th to mid-19th centuries. At that time, Europeans did not understand the biological cause of scurvy and tended to avoid eating foods that Indigenous Arctic people consumed to prevent it, such as muktuk, a dish of whale skin and blubber that is a good source of vitamins C and D.

“Scurvy does not only affect bones; it also compromises the immune system, increases vulnerability to infection, weakens wound healing and contributes to overall physical decline,” Loktu said. “We believe this likely played an important role in weakening the men physically.”


What to read next

Several whalers had evidence of wear on their teeth, which suggests they regularly smoked a pipe.

(Image credit: Loktu, Brødholt, 2026, PLOS One; CC-BY 4.0)

The researchers also found dental evidence that most of the men smoked a pipe. By constantly clenching a clay pipe between their teeth, the men developed circular indentations in their enamel. Smoking is known to deplete the body’s stores of vitamin C, which could have contributed to the development of scurvy.

“While smoking itself cannot explain the scurvy, tobacco use may potentially have worsened overall health and nutritional stress,” Loktu said. “It seems likely that prolonged hard labor, nutritional stress, disease and general physical frailty ultimately became the ‘last straw’ that tipped already weakened bodies beyond recovery.”

Loktu and Brødholt also focused their study on Likneset because parts of the burial site have already been lost to coastal erosion. They compared graves excavated at three times — the late 1980s, 2016 and 2019 — and discovered that the permafrost-preserved burial area found 40 years ago was already collapsing due to climate-driven processes, including rapid Arctic warming. This may present problems for future studies of early modern whalers.

“Rapid Arctic warming is accelerating the degradation of permafrost-preserved archaeological sites, placing organic-rich whaling burials on Svalbard among the most vulnerable heritage contexts,” the researchers wrote in the study. These findings suggest that preservation conditions should continue to be monitored, “as climate-driven degradation and coastal erosion are rapidly reducing the informational value of archaeological archives on Svalbard,” they wrote.

Loktu, L. & Brødholt, E.T. (2026). Skeletons in the permafrost: Exploring climate-driven heritage loss and occupational health at the early modern whaling burial site of Likneset, Svalbard. PLOS One. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0347033


What do you know about the bones in your body? Test your knowledge with our human skeleton quiz!

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

RNA can form large 3D structures, suggesting a new role for the molecule in the origin of life on Earth

RNA can form large 3D structures, suggesting a new role for the molecule in the origin of life on Earth

‘These are striking forecasts’: Super El Niño keeps getting even more likely, and it could bring a humanitarian crisis

‘These are striking forecasts’: Super El Niño keeps getting even more likely, and it could bring a humanitarian crisis

FDA links ‘explosive diarrhea’ parasite infections to Taco Bell shredded lettuce

FDA links ‘explosive diarrhea’ parasite infections to Taco Bell shredded lettuce

‘Potentially hazardous’ asteroid Apophis could be visible to 90% of Earth’s population during ultraclose 2029 flyby, new maps reveal

‘Potentially hazardous’ asteroid Apophis could be visible to 90% of Earth’s population during ultraclose 2029 flyby, new maps reveal

Heaven Lake: China’s deepest lake sits atop a colossal volcano and belongs mostly to North Korea

Heaven Lake: China’s deepest lake sits atop a colossal volcano and belongs mostly to North Korea

Did ancient Egyptian princesses use weapons? Controversial study claims they hunted or trained with the military, but not all experts agree.

Did ancient Egyptian princesses use weapons? Controversial study claims they hunted or trained with the military, but not all experts agree.

‘This was one of the most arduous expeditions I’ve ever done’: Scientists confirm that 15-mile-wide pit found on Google Maps is ancient meteor crater

‘This was one of the most arduous expeditions I’ve ever done’: Scientists confirm that 15-mile-wide pit found on Google Maps is ancient meteor crater

Ancient chariot emerges among remains of mysterious society that burned down its own buildings and then disappeared

Ancient chariot emerges among remains of mysterious society that burned down its own buildings and then disappeared

Physicists solve decade-old mathematical puzzle with help from Claude AI: It ‘significantly shifted my perspective on what these models can achieve in theoretical physics’

Physicists solve decade-old mathematical puzzle with help from Claude AI: It ‘significantly shifted my perspective on what these models can achieve in theoretical physics’

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Dem-run ‘Dear White Staffers’ X account joins calls for ICE to kill anyone in Epstein files

Dem-run ‘Dear White Staffers’ X account joins calls for ICE to kill anyone in Epstein files

July 17, 2026
LeBron James denies a 76ers hint after ‘trust the process’ comment

LeBron James denies a 76ers hint after ‘trust the process’ comment

July 17, 2026
Polymarket promo code NYPMAX: Deposit , get  for college football markets

Polymarket promo code NYPMAX: Deposit $20, get $50 for college football markets

July 17, 2026
RNA can form large 3D structures, suggesting a new role for the molecule in the origin of life on Earth

RNA can form large 3D structures, suggesting a new role for the molecule in the origin of life on Earth

July 17, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
WHO updates dementia guidance: a new risk factor, supplements to avoid and a hearing loss must

WHO updates dementia guidance: a new risk factor, supplements to avoid and a hearing loss must

July 17, 2026
Exclusive | Stew Leonard’s lettuce sales drop 11% during cyclospora outbreak, prompting promotion of ‘safer’ greenhouse greens

Exclusive | Stew Leonard’s lettuce sales drop 11% during cyclospora outbreak, prompting promotion of ‘safer’ greenhouse greens

July 17, 2026
States must take election security steps or lose federal funding, Trump admin vows in latest push to pass SAVE America Act

States must take election security steps or lose federal funding, Trump admin vows in latest push to pass SAVE America Act

July 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.