Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 18

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 18
Timothy J. Horsley & Stephen J. Dockrill these remains has never been confirmed through archaeological evidence (Ibid. 1994, 96-7). In 1907, Daniel Bruun and Finnur Jónsson excavated four of the booths and in the building interpreted as the proba- ble church (Bruun & Jónsson, 1908; Jónsson, 1908; and Bruun, 1928). More recently, in 1986 Margrét Hermanns- Auðardóttir excavated four trial trenches in different areas of the site, including an investigation of the church (Hermanns- Auðardóttir, 1987). The remains at Gásir present an ideal situation for the assessment of geophysi- cal techniques since the surface features allow the anomalies detected to be readi- ly compared with known archaeology. Gásir poses many archaeological ques- tions and it was hoped that these surveys might also provide new information about the site. Aerial photographs of the site clearly reveal the large surviving earthworks, however the question arises whether the limit of these remains accu- rately indicates the limit of buried archaeology. Geophysical surveys might reveal if activity continues in the areas outside the earthworks, in addition to providing archaeological information for the amorphous earthworks. The bedrock in the region consists of basalt strata formed during the Tertiary period, 5-10 million years ago (Hallgrímsdóttir 1997, 2), which out- crops on the higher ground at the site. The land in which the remains are situat- ed is given over to horse pasture and is covered with well-established thufur, up to 0.5m in height. A grid, 40m x lOOm, was established to included the churchyard, a number of booth remains, and an apparently 'archaeologically quiet' area in between. In this way the geophysical responses to a variety of features could be assessed. Magnetometer results The results of the magnetometer data (see Figure 2b for a processed plot) have revealed a number of interesting anom- alies. The most striking of these are visi- ble at the westem end of the survey area, where a circular positive anomaly con- taining a rectilinear positive anomaly has been detected, coinciding with the remains of the church and churchyard. Other intense anomalies in this region correspond to the areas where the basalt bedrock outcrops, and are interpreted as being of geological origin. The area of booths also reveals itself as an area of broader effects, with some intense positive anomalies following reg- ular shapes. This contrasts to the zone between the booths and churchyard where it is still quite magnetically noisy, but the anomalies are less intense and small scale. Figure 2c presents an interpretation of the main anomalies recorded. The bank of the churchyard boundary appears as a positive linear magnetic anomaly, in some places there are two of these linear anomalies parallel to each other. These might be the response to magnetic rocks within the bank, possibly as stone fac- ings, which have not previously been recorded. Similar anomalies are seen in the area corresponding with the church structure. As concluded by Bruun and Hermannsdóttir, the church was con- 16
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