Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Qupperneq 119

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Qupperneq 119
Gröf - Methods and Interpretations paved floor of the main passage a stone- paved sewer or channel runs from the lavatory and opens a short distance in front of the outer door. Gestsson 1959, 84 [trans. author] This sewer seems a little strange because if it really is a sewer from the lavatory, it lies right along the main passage and the main entrance of the complex. One can imagine that the odour for inhabitants and visitors was not a nice one, even though it was a closed sewer. But there are more examples of similar drains in Icelandic medieval and post-medieval houses (e.g. Skálholt). In the hall (skáli) there are built-in benches (set) along the long sides and even alcoves at the south side. In the living room (skáli) and kitchen there are traces of timber walls and in the living room and skáli there seems to have been timber boarding. In the complex there were six fireplaces, one a long-fire, but none of them are neatly constructed according to Gestsson. About 50 metres east of the farmstead are the byre and the bam. Gestsson's cal- culations lead to the conclusion that the byre could accommodate around twenty heads of cattle and that the bam would not have taken less than 126 cubic metres of hay. Just northwest of the pantry's gable is the kiln house (corn-dryer) which is unique in Iceland (see below). All the outer walls, and most of the inner walls, were built of stones, some of them very large; mostly basalt but also liparite and obsidian, with soil in the middle. The highest were around 2 metres high but the thickness varied considerably, up to 3 metres wide. All the mins were full of this white pumice and because of it the walls of the buildings had preserved to a remarkable degree. Method and Interpretation at Gröf The excavation method at Gröf was basi- cally to unveil the buildings á la Pompeii. Gestsson's team dug hard and fast until the buildings were uncovered but, cultur- al layers inside the buildings including the floors were not investigated. When the mins had been cleaned, the buildings were measured with tapes and a plan was drawn, along with a few sections to demonstrate the stratigraphy and details of the buildings. A few photographs were also taken after the buildings had been cleaned out and samples collected. The samples consisted of birch bark, bones from a cooking pit, some bumt wood and grain. The samples have not been used for dating or analyzed further, except for the barley grains which were identified as such by Sturla Friðriksson. Of the artefacts, 74 pieces were roughly located, for example: "Whetstone (úr leirskífer), one end broken, pretty used and crooked. Length: 9.4, width: 2.0, thickness: 1.2 - house II, on southem bench" (set). Gísli Gestsson 1959, 74 (614) [Transl. author]. Often the descrip- tions are more precise. It is not stated what kind of bones were found and no sieving was carried out. One might say that the digging strate- gy was based on "common sense". By that I mean that the excavation process 117
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Archaeologia Islandica

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