Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 107

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 107
Endurjng Impacts: Viking Age Settlement in Iceland and Greenland farmsteads or whether they were domi- nated by larger socio-economic struc- tures in the form of chiefly estates. In addressing these issues, we will make use of both 9th - Uth century archaeological and environmental data and patterning in later farm distribution in Iceland and Greenland. Contemporary Evidence While a number of 9th - lOth century sites have been excavated and dated in Iceland and a few deposits have been investigated dating to the later Greenlandic landnám of the 1 lth century, most attempts to map the process of set- tlement chronologically (Smith 1995) have been hampered by very uneven pat- terns of research effort and accidental discovery (see Bjarni Einarsson 1994, 46-67). It is probably premature to gener- alize from the few early sites we can now map to a direct reconstruction of 9th - 1 Oth century settlement pattern in either Iceland or Greenland. However, while we may still be forced to discuss points rather than patterns, some generalizations can be made on the basis of what we now know of early settlement and subsistence. Dating the settlement process. While only a handful of sites in Iceland can be positively dated to the late 9th century the emerging picture is of a very rapid colonization of the whole country in a matter of decades after the fírst set- tlers arrived. This is not only suggested by a growing number of early radiocar- bon dates (the interpretation of which has been problematic as they tend to give too high an age - see discussion by Olsson 1999) but more importantly by the now more or less secure dating of the so- called Landnám tephra. This tephra is frequently observed immediately below the earliest archaeological deposits at a high number of sites. Trace elements of this tephra have been found in the Greenland ice sheet which have allowed its dating to AD 871±2 (Karl Grönvold et al. 1995). Claims have been made for human disturbance beneath this horizon but none of them have been substantiat- ed, whereas in a number of sites (e.g. Herjólfsdalur, Bessastaðir, Reykjavík, Seltjarnarnes and Sveigakot in Mývatnssveit) it is clear that people had arrived and started building houses in a matter of a few years after the tephra was deposited (Orri Vésteinsson 1998, 4). While the majority of these sites are on the coast, Sveigakot is more than 60 km from the sea and more than 280 m above sea level. Indications of early occupation are also available írom the inland areas of Hálsasveit (Smith 1995), Þjórsárdalur (Sigurður Þórarinsson 1944) and from a number of sites on the highland margins in the North and East (Sigurður Þórarinsson 1977, Sveinbjörn Rafnsson 1990, Guðrún Sveinbjamardóttir 1992). Pollen analytical studies point in the same general direction. Claims have even been made for evidence for cereal grow- ing in Reykjavík prior to the deposition of the Landnám tephra (Margrét Hallsdóttir 1987) and a marked change is consistently noted in pollen columns in association with this tephra. In multiple cores and profiles, birch pollen (Betula sp.) drop drastically whereas grass pollen (Poceae) increase correspondingly and 105
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