Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 83

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 83
ICELANDIC FARMHOUSE EXCAVATIONS: FlELD METHODS AND SITE CHOICES which has been targeted for investigation primarily because of its low status, to provide a contrast to the neighbouring high status site. Geographical distribution As is apparent from Figure 2. the geo- graphical distribution of excavated farm sites in Iceland is very uneven. Most work has been carried out in the South and Southwest with a defínite concentra- tion in Þjórsárdalur, reflecting the semi- nal position of that region in Icelandic archaeology. Other parts of the country are much more patchily represented, with large gaps in the Northwest and far East. The only region beginning to rival the South is the Northeast where considerable archaeological activity has been ongoing since the early 1990s. These pattems are to a degree shaped by issues of transport and access from urban areas. Both foreign and native archaeologists have as a rale had their bases in Reykjavík and the number of sites within two hour driving from the city no doubt reflects this. Constraction work in and around Reykjavík is also responsible for several rescue excava- tions and it is noteworthy that all the multi-period sites - along with all the early modem sites - are found in the South and Southwest. Excavations of Viking age farm sites are the most evenly spread with represen- tatives in all parts of the country except the westem part of the Northem quarter where very limited archaeological work of any kind has taken place. The possible 12th-13th century sites are all from one small part of the South while a high proportion of late medieval sites is from the southeast and none from the North. Publication The status of publication of Icelandic farmstead excavations is remarkably good. Some sort of final report exists for all the sites excavated before the 1980s except Bergþórshvoll and Reyðarfell. A summary of the fíndings at Bergþórshvoll was published in 1952 and it is doubtful if better sense of the records of the structural evidence can be made. A full catalogue of the artefacts found remains however to be published. The large excavation projects of the 1980s, Stóraborg, Viðey and Bessastaðir have all been briefly reported but final publication is still some time away. These massive undertakings proved a hard lesson for Icelandic archaeologists. In none of these cases was funding secured to pay for the post-excavation and in the case of Viðey no post-excava- tion work has been funded since the proj- ect was dropped by the Reykjavík coun- cil after the 1994 season. It was however in Viðey that the publication of annual interim reports was introduced as stan- dard practice and such reports exist from nearly all excavations undertaken in Iceland since the early 1990s. Other excavation projects are either ongoing or have only recently been com- pleted with post-excavation work in full swing. Recent developments include the publishing of excavation archives - 81
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Archaeologia Islandica

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