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Many specialists are still skeptical. Donna Heddle, the director of the Center for Nordic Studies at Scotland's University of the Highlands and Islands, described the solar compass hypothesis as speculative. "There's no solid evidence that that device was used by Norse navigators," she said Friday. "There's never been one found in a Viking boat. One cannot help but feel that if there were such things they would be found in graves." She acknowledged that the crystal came from Iceland and was found near a navigation tool, but said it might just as easily have been used as a magnifying device as a solar compass. Le Floch argued that one of the reasons why no stones have been found before is that calcite degrades quickly
-- it's vulnerable to acid, sea salts, and to heat. The Alderney Crystal was originally transparent, but the sea water had turned it a milky white. Le Floch's paper -- written with Guy Ropars, Jacques Lucas, and a group of Britons from the Alderney Maritime Trust
-- appeared Wednesday in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A. ___ Online: A video tutorial on how birefringence works:
http://www.sixtysymbols.com/
videos/birefringence.htm
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