Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Qupperneq 114

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Qupperneq 114
Orri Vésteinsson, Thomas H. McGovern, Christian Keller (E17a) and Westem (W51, W48) settle- ment areas. Birds were exploited, but not so heavily as in southem Iceland. Seals and caribou (here included in the Other category, see Fig. 5 for breakdown) instead dominate the wild species collec- tions. Seals taken include harbor seals (P. vitulina), harp seals (P. groenl.), bearded seals (E.barbatus) and hooded seals (C. crystata, only in the Eastern Settlement). In later time periods, seal bones percent- ages tend to rise (to over 75% of total collection in 14th century layers at W48) except at the large chieftain’s farm W51 where seals decline relative to caribou (McGovem et al. 1996). Despite excel- lent conditions of preservation and repeated intensive sieving efforts, fish remains have never been recovered in quantity from Greenlandic sites- a marked contrast to lceland and the rest of the Scandinavian North Atlantic (Amorosi et al. 1994). Some locational anomalies may signal the operation of some sort of communal networks in Greenland. Seal bones are actually more common on some small inland farms with no direct access to salt water than on large coastal farms, and caribou bone fre- quencies indicate that select cuts of deer probably killed in the highlands were being differentially deposited at the mag- nates’ farms on the coast (McGovern et al. 1996). Sea birds (mainly auks) are found on most farms, inland and coastal alike, and fragments of walrus bone on inland sites likewise suggest group par- ticipation in hunting. Overall, the animal bone evidence supports the image of a broad (but selec- tive) foraging strategy applied to wild resources, an interest and ability to trans- fer marine products substantial distances inland, and a core reliance upon a suite of imported European domesticates initially including substantial numbers of pigs. Significant regional diversity is evident in Icelandic use of wild resources (a pat- tem that continues down to the early modem period), but the Greenlandic pat- tern of dependence on seals and caribou (and minor use of fish) proves far more uniform and lasts to the end of the colony. Icelandic use of wild resources appears more complex and regionalized, though the recovery of substantial amounts of físh bones (and the occasion- al seal bone) on interior Icelandic sites at all periods similarly suggests the opera- tion of some sort of regional provisioning network. Nearly all the wild resources men- tioned in Skallagrímr’s tale are present in one or another bone collection, and wild species clearly played an important sup- porting role in the subsistence economies of both islands. However, all known ani- mal bone collections from early Iceland and Greenland (including many too small to reasonably quantify) contain bones of the core domesticates. This suggests that while emphasis was placed on acquiring a wide variety of resources, each settle- ment unit was based on the production of domesticated animals. Even if the small- est units were to some extent specialized out-stations following the Skallagrímr model, they were soon run as farms boasting a full spectrum of domestic mammals, though not necessarily in the same proportion as the core settlement. It seems that differences in ratios of cattle 112
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Archaeologia Islandica

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