The island’s first sustained human presence brushes the horizon of the Viking Age. Settlement archaeology and place‑name evidence place colonization of Iceland in the late 9th and early 10th centuries CE (commonly c. 870–930 CE). Excavations at coastal farmsteads and burial sites — including Hrolfsstadir, Straumur, Smyrlaberg and Vatnsdalur — reveal longhouses, middens, boat‑related features and imported objects that trace trade and voyaging networks across the North Atlantic.
Ancient DNA from 24 individuals across these northern and north‑western sites provides a genetic layer to the story. The predominance of Y‑DNA labeled R (13/24) alongside I and I1 lineages supports a strong male contribution consistent with Norse voyagers, while maternal haplogroup diversity (H, U, K, J, H1) suggests multiple female source populations. Archaeological data indicates contacts with the British Isles (artefacts, certain burial practices), and the mtDNA mix is compatible with archaeological hints of Gaelic–Norse interaction.
Limited evidence and a modest sample size mean interpretations are provisional: regional sampling biases, taphonomic loss, and the 300‑year date span (850–1160 CE) all blur fine chronological changes. Nevertheless, when archaeology and DNA are read together, they form a vivid tableau of early Iceland as an island rapidly woven into North Atlantic networks by seafarers, settlers and their families.