Other claimed Norse artifacts in the area south of the St. Lawrence include a growing number of stones inscribed with runic letters.
It is intended to encode all shapes of runic letters.
There was a striking mise-en-scène, stacks of what looked like white books, one hung from on high, and runic letters projected on the rear wall.
On it were lines of small runic letters, each one scratched with a knife and then marked out with red dye.
On the other hand, Elliot sees it as an evolution of the normal runic letter by straightening the left branching stroke and mirroring the letter.
Several other Anglo-Saxon weapons have isolated runic letters on them.
This thwart had marks carved upon it, made on Bjarni's previous voyage with runic letters carved against the marks.
These runic letters each carry a symbolic meaning well suited to the units.
In runic letters, it also reads, Leif, son of Erik the Red.