Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 26

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 26
Timothy J. Horsley & Stephen J. Dockrill building remains revealed in the earth resistance survey, but linear positive anomalies also reveal buried features in their own right. Some of these anomalies can be compared with anomalies in the earth resistance survey and demonstrate the complementary nature of these two survey methods. Hofstadir, Mývatnssveit The farm of Hofstaðir in North East Iceland has been a focus of archaeologi- cal interest throughout this century, in particular on the Viking Age great hall (skáli) long considered a temple or 'tem- ple-farm' site (Friðriksson and Vésteinsson, 1997a). Since 1996, a Field School has been held at Hofstaðir, run jointly by the FSl and NABO (The North Atlantic Biocultural Organisation), and in 1999 provided the opportunity for geophysical surveys to be fully integrated with their own investigations. Hofstaðir is located within the valley of the Laxá river in Mývatnsveit, NE Iceland, centred on Grid Ref. 461488/568107 (Lucas, 1998). The region around Lake Mývatn lies on the Ódáðahraun lava fields (Hjálmarsson and Astridge, 1998). The proximity of the farm to Mývatn and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge means that this basalt will be quite recent, less than 10,000 years old (Ibid. 1998). Although the area of the present homefield is generally level, both exca- vation and geophysical evidence at Hofstaðir show that the depth of soil down to the geology is quite varied. In one place, augering revealed that solid rock was only 0.2m below the surface, while the 1999 excavation of the pit- house only c.60m away, extended to a depth of almost 2m and had not hit bedrock. Archaeological deposits at Hofstaðir are sealed between layers of aeolian deposits, including sands and tephras (Sigurgeirsson, 1998; Simpson et al., 1998). The main tephra layers associated with cultural deposits at the site include the Landnám tephra, formed in 869-873 AD, H-1104/1158, V-1477 and V-1717 (Sigurgeirsson 1998), and a summary of the tephrochronological studies at the site may be found in this reference. “Today, the farmland at Hofstaðir is used for growing hay, usually cut and dried in the first weeks of August. Turf cutting has taken place on the site in recent years” (Jónsson and Jónsson, pers. comm.). A variety of surface features exist at Hofstaðir providing some evidence for the subsurface archaeology. These include the walls of the Viking-Age long- house, the farm mound, turf boundary banks and other slight earthworks indi- cating the sites of former structures asso- ciated with the farm. Geophysical inves- tigations were undertaken over many of these features, although only the results from the survey over the farm mound and the area immediately to the east are pre- sented here. Still in use, the present day homefield is relatively flat and free of thufur, although in places there are bands of par- allel ruts, similar to those caused by ploughing, but may be artefacts of turf- 24
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