Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.1998, Side 137

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.1998, Side 137
Archaeological Sediments and Site Formation at Hofstaðir, Mývatn, NE-Iceland lenses, some no more than 0.5 cm thick, which were composed of either tephra from the Landnám sequence, peat ash or windblown silt, or are mixed layers containing variable a- mounts of silt, charcoal, ash and black organic material. No two turves contained the same lenses, indicating that they had been of variable origin, and that their history was probably more complicated than that of wall or roof collapse. Also, turves containing such fine, variable layers have not been found in any of the turf structures that have been excavated on the site so far. Five micromorphology samples (Pr. 1/1 -1/5; fig.l) were taken in the hopes of determining whether they had first been used as building materials, or whether they had been freshly dug out of the ground and thrown into the threshold with the rest of the soil fill. This interpretation may be difficult but it will be aided by comparing these samples to those from the intact turf wall and the in situ Landnám tephra sequence. If it proves to be possible to detect features indicative of exposure, weathering, shrinkage, and/ or loss of structural integrity prior to burial, it may be interpreted that these turves were used as building materials in a house that has not yet been excavated on the site, or at least that they were stockpiled prior to their use as fill in the doorway. The uppermost micromorphology sample in this sequence (Pr. 1/5) is especially interesting because it con- tains the boundary between the doorway fill and the post-abandon- ment layer of windblown silt that also caps the turf wall. Because it is pos- sible that the walls and roof were in- tentionally dismantled in order to fill in the structure, it will be interesting to see if there is any evidence for the intentional truncation of the doorway fill at this time. It may be difficult to interpret this, however, because the upper surface of both the wall and the fill will have been exposed, possibly for some time, before the windblown silt began to accumulate in sufficient amounts to protect them from degra- dation. 3) Floors of the Structure in Area D: The turf structure in Area D had been investigated by Daniel Bruun in 1908, but the 1997 excavation revealed that Bruun had not completely removed the interior of the structure on its north end. On either side of Bruun’s north-south trench through the structure, floor layers were found pre- served in situ under post-abandon- ment fill, which was composed of long horizontal turves and soil. Once again, the original floor surface was on the undulating Hekla-3 tephra layer and associated soil (silt loam; 5YR 3/4 dark reddish brown). At the time of construction, these layers had been reached by removing the overlying soil, prehistoric tephra layers and the ubiquitous C4, to a depth of 25-30cm below the ground surface. Ten micro- morphology samples were taken from the floor layers in Area D, of which seven include the original floor surface 137
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Archaeologia Islandica

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