Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Qupperneq 28

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Qupperneq 28
Ragnar Edvardsson & Thomas H. McGovern slag within the floor deposits, may sug- gest that the building was used as a smithy. However, this is difficult to deter- mine based on the existing evidence and it is hoped that further analysis of the floor deposits will shed some light on this issue. Finds During the excavation at Vatnsljörður, a total of 103 artefacts were recorded. A large portion of the artefacts were iron objects (40%) consisting of nails and tools. Other artefacts included two beads, a spindle whorl, a whetstone, worked whale bone, a loom weight and a fish hammer. Broken down by occupational phase 40 objects were found in the floor deposits of the later phase. This repre- sents approximately 40% of the total number of fínds. Most of which were made of iron including a door lock. The iron objects were scattered across the floor, which suggests that they came from the timber frame of the building (roof, paneling or posts), and fell to the floor when the building collapsed or was tom down. Also recovered in this floor deposit was a double yellow bead. Double beads are a type of bead that is well-recorded in Viking Age graves in Iceland and across the Viking world. One such Icelandic bead was found in the pagan burial at Komsá in Ameshreppur. Beads of this type have been dated to the late lOth century (Eldjám 2000). Approximately 15 artefacts were recovered from the longhouse floor deposits, about 15.5% of the total num- ber. These objects were comparable to those recorded in the later phase. Similarly, most of the artefacts compris- ing this phase were made of iron, includ- ing nails, unidentified iron fragments, whetstone, etc. Also recorded in this phase was a complete, opaque, paste bead. This type of bead is also common in Viking Age burials and was recorded at Komsá. As before, this bead more than likely dates to the lOth century. Other artefacts that could be identified in the longhouse floor deposits were two loom weights, a fish hammer and a broken spindle whorl made of stone. The remaining 45.5% came from various deposits, such as wall collapse and rab- bish deposits. Vatnsfjörður Archaeofauna Bone preservation at Vatnsfjörður is vari- able, ranging from excellent to poor, with most of the damage apparently caused by mechanical soil processes rather than soil acidity (upper layers were more exposed to freeze-thaw cycles). Deeper deposits will produce more consistent levels of bone preservation, and the site has the potential to produce signifícant collec- tions. The animal bones from the 2003- 2004 Vatnsfjörður excavations thus far comprise 142 identifíable bones out of a total of 314 fragments recovered. This NISP count is thus far well below the number required for a fully quantifíed analysis, but is large enough to suggest some general pattems (NISP=number of identified specimens). Table 1 presents the current archaeofauna by taxon, com- bining all contexts. Table 2 presents the same data broken down by context. The full range of domestic mammals is pres- ent, including pig bones and a single goat. Pigs are common on Icelandic sites from the 9th-11 th centuries but become increasingly rare by the 12th-13th cen- turies. A complete adult pig mandible from the floor of the long hall is a partic- 26
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Archaeologia Islandica

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