Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2015, Side 44

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2015, Side 44
Elín Ósk Hreiðarsdóttir, Guðrún Alda Gísladóttir, Kristborg Þórsdóttir And Ragnheiður Gló Gylfadóttir In the valley of Þjórsárdalur farm aban- donment has been directly linked to the eruptions of Hekla. Þjórsárdalur is about 15 km northwest of Hekla, further away from the volcano than Rangárvellir, but much more seriously affected by early historic eruptions due to the generally northerly di- rection of Hekla’s tephra fall-out. The idea of Þjórsárdalur as the Pompeii of the north was promoted by Daniel Bruun in 1896 (Bruun 1897, 24) and in 1939 a Nordic archaeologi- cal expedition excavated five farm sites in the valley (Stenberger ed. 1943). The Þjórsárdalur project was a milestone in the development of archaeology in Iceland and from the mid- dle of the 20th century onwards the focus of Icelandic archaeologists was very much on marginal settlements and their abandonment (See e.g. Eldjárn 1949, 1951, 1961; Rafnsson 1977,1990; Sveinbjarnardóttir 1992). Sigurður Þórarinsson was the first to demonstrate extensive farm abandonment in the highland periphery in Iceland dur- ing the llth and 12th centuries and in the 1970s he proposed a hypothesis explaining the abandonment of peripheral settlements in Iceland. In Þórarinsson’s view single dev- astating events such as volcanic eruptions and glacial outburst floods may have af- fected geographically limited areas but the extensive farm abandonment during the llth and 12th centuries was due to an over- estimation of land quality in marginal areas resulting in overgrazing and loss of vegeta- tion (Þórarinsson 1977). For a long time it was believed that the settlement in Þjórsárdalur had been com- pletely destroyed in a major volcanic erup- tion of Hekla. The debate was about whether this was the eruption of 1104 or 1300. Ar- chaeologist Vilhjálmur Örn Vilhjálmsson began new research at the site of Stöng in Þjórsárdalur in the 1980s (Vilhjálmsson 1989). He argued that the abandonment of the Þjórsárdalur farms had proceeded gradually up until the middle of the 13th century as a result of complex processes of erosion and loss of vegetation set in mo- tion by volcanic activity, but was not occa- sioned by a single eruption. Vilhjámsson's model of settlement and abandonment of Þjórsárdalur suggested more complexity in the process of abandonment in the area than earlier theories and even if it likely represents a more realistic model of farm abandonment and has received some sup- port (e.g. Dugmore et al. 2007), it has been largely overlooked by Icelandic scholarship (see e.g. Karlsson 2000, 45). During the last 10-15 years there has been greater emphasis on studying the his- tory of settlements in lowland areas. Re- search in northeastern Iceland has revealed up to a 30% decrease in the numbers of farmsteads in the 12th and 13th centuries in areas such as Mývatnssveit and Reykja- hverfi where the abandonments cannot be attributed to obvious environmental changes (Lárusdóttir 2007; Vésteinsson 2008). In general, recent research suggests 42

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