On the wind-swept shores of Saaremaa, the stone and timber of ship burials at Salme frame a dramatic scene: communities bound to the Baltic by boat, trade and seasonal voyaging. Archaeological data indicates there were violent seafaring episodes and organized burial rituals at Salme (central Saaremaa) during the Early Viking Age (ca. 7th–10th centuries CE). Radiocarbon dates within the broader Estonia_EarlyViking suite fall between 649 and 949 CE, situating these people amid the rising mobility of northern Europe.
Material culture from Salme — ship timbers, weaponry, personal ornaments and animal offerings — points to practiced mariners with connections across the Baltic and into Scandinavia. Limited evidence suggests some burial assemblages reflect raiding or expeditionary groups rather than only local kinship burials. Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological traces hint at mixed subsistence strategies combining coastal foraging, livestock, and imported goods.
Genetic results from 34 sampled individuals allow a clearer picture of origins: paternal lineages dominated by haplogroup I with substantial representation of R and N indicate both long-standing northwestern European roots and links to northeastern Baltic/Uralic-influenced gene pools. While archaeological context anchors these people in Saaremaa, the genetic mix corroborates archaeological indicators of Baltic–Scandinavian exchange. Ongoing sampling beyond Salme is needed to define how representative these finds are for wider Estonian Early Viking populations.