Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 84

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 84
Orri Vésteinsson including grey literature - over the inter- net (e.g. Hofstaðir in Mývatnssveit on www. instarch.is/arena/hof.htm). The development of fíeld methods in Iceland Looting Iceland is no different from other coun- tries in that the earliest diggings for archaeological remains were character- ized by looting rather than scholarly endeavour. Recent examination of pagan burials which were looted in the late medieval period has shown that the looters approached their task with a cer- tain method, exhibiting an awareness of stratigraphy and colour changes associat- ed with different deposits. Nevertheless looting to recover ancient artefacts for their aesthetic or antiquarian value has always been relatively rare in Iceland (more for a lack of aesthetically pleasing artefacts than a lack of intention) and cannot be said to have influenced the development of fíeld methods when archaeological work began in the 19th century. Trenching for negative evidence It can be an amusing parlour game to identify the earliest archaeological inter- vention but for Iceland this honour will here be given to Jónas Hallgrímsson, who in 1843 dug a small trench in a ruin at Þingnes, a supposed assembly site not far from Reykjavík. From his excavation Hallgrímsson concluded that as he had not found any signs of dung the structure in question could not be an animal shel- ter, and was therefore quite likely an assembly booth, a temporary structure to shelter representatives at the assembly. This method which can be termed test trenching for negative evidence was fre- quently employed in the 19th century and was the dominant way of excavation until the 1890s. The rationale behind this method can be summarised thus: If one has reasonable grounds (e.g. place name, local tradition, form) to interpret a given structure as X, the demonstrable lack of evidence contradicting this supposition, must strengthen it. Normally the struc- tures being tested were supposed to be assembly booths, temples or dwellings so the absence of animal dung was often considered to be a good indication of the validity of the supposition. A variant of this method is when positive evidence was found, normally ash and charcoal considered to indicate a dwelling or the temple fire. It is apparent that fieldworkers of this period realised the limitations of this method, but they rarely had the means to conduct more extensive excavations, and what is more were most often quite cer- tain in their identifícations. The trench- ing was therefore carried out more to convince possible doubters, and as a show of the excavators' command of sci- entifíc methodology, rather than a really investigative effort. In general however excavation was not a frequently employed method in Icelandic archaeolo- gy in the 19th century. Fieldworkers like Kristian Kaalund (active in the mid 1870s), Sigurður Vigfússon (1880s) and Brynjúlfur Jónsson (1890s and 1900s) 82
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