Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Side 33

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Side 33
Yekaterina Krivogorskaya, Sophia Perdikaris and Thomas H. McGovern FISH BONES AND FISHERMEN: THE POTENTIAL OF ZOOARCHAEOLOGYIN THE WESTFJORDS The date for the onset of full scale commercial fisheries in Iceland remains some- what controversial, but thus far the earliest radiocarbon dated seasonal fishing sta- tion (llth-13th century) is in NW Iceland's Strandasýsla County at Akurvík. This paper presents a preliminary report of the ongoing analysis of the large archaeo- fauna from the farm mound at Gjögur, 3 km from Akurvík, places the site of Gjögur in the wider context of the North West region of Iceland by comparing the site with the Akurvík archaeofauna, and outlines new methodologies of recon- structing live fish size and age based on recovered fish bones. Although the Akurvík site provides a first zooarchaeological look at a Medieval fishing station, it is the site of Gjögur that would have controlled and integrated Akurvík's catch- es into the larger regional arena of Northem Iceland, as well as using fishing to aid the economy of Gjögur itself. Yekaterina Krivogorskaya, CUNYNorthern Science and Education Center, Dept of Anthropology and Archaeology, Brooklyn College, 2900 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn NY11210 Sophia Perdikaris, Brooklyn College Zooarchaeology Laboratory, Dept of Anthropology and Archaeology, Brooklyn College, 2900 Bedford Avenue, BrooklynNY 11210 Thomas H. McGovern, Hunter College Bioarchaeology Laboratory, Dept. of Anthropology, Hunter College, 695 Park Avenue, New York, NY10021 Keywords: North West Iceland, North Atlantic, Fishing Farm, Zooarchaeology Introduction This paper presents a brief overview of archaeological excavations in 1990 at the site of Gjögur, Strandasýsla, NW Iceland, and presents preliminary results of the animal bone collections from both the lower and the upper contexts from Gjögur as compared with results from excavation of nearby físhing booths at Akurvík (Amundsen, et al. 2005 in press, Krivogorskaya, et al. in press). The sites of Akurvík and Gjögur have radio-carbon dates spanning the 12th-15th centuries A.D., and this paper compares early and later early medieval contexts of both sites. The Akurvík site archaeofauna (animal bone collection) came from two thick but stratigraphically separate layers of físh bone associated with two small turf structures exposed along an 18 m long erosion face. Stratigraphic evidence indicates multiple periods of abandon- ment and re-use of these lightly built structures, suggesting a seasonal rather than permanent occupation. The Akurvík ruins are best interpreted as one of a series of superimposed seasonal físhing booths - lightly built structures designed to temporarily house a boat's crew but not a farming household (Edvardsson, et Archaeologia Islandica 4 (2005) 31-50
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Archaeologia Islandica

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