Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Side 45

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Side 45
Fish Bones and Fishermen: The Potential of Zooarchaeology in the Westfjords ture similar to what might be observed to the otolith. By using low level microscopy the growth rings can be counted and an approximate age estimat- ed (pending on the ring clarity +/- a sea- son). While researchers (Van Neer et al. 2003) have cautioned over the estima- tion of the season represented by growth rings on certain species, the overall age estimations in this paper are consistent and compare favorably to the growth rings present on codfish with known age and season of capture. Atlas vertebrae, with dark and light rings, indicating winter and summer growths respectively, can be used to effectively reconstruct the age of the fish (based on experimental controls of cod of known age). The lighter, usually thicker rings are accumulated during spring and summer months when abundant food supplies produce more rapid growth. The darker and usually thinner rings are accumulated during winter and fall sea- sons when the food abundance is reduced. Thus a year is represented by a combination of a light and a dark band. Like analyses of mammalian tooth struc- ture (Woollett 2004a; 2004b) fish atlas ring counting can supply both the age and season of death of the individual. This development provides zooarchaeol- ogists with another tool for contributing to a better understanding of the long term dynamics of cod stocks before the begin- ning of the modem fisheries records (around 1900). Atlas vertebrae were selected based on their preservation and com- pleteness. The vertebrae were then care- fully brushed to remove dust and sand particles without damaging the bone. Atlas vertebrae were scanned using a Hewlett Packard Scanjet ADF. As anteri- or and posterior sides of atlas have the same ring count, both sides were scanned so that a more accurate and consistent ring count could be obtained. After a pre- liminary scan was performed, vertebrae were then scanned to Adobe Photoshop 7.0 at a resolution of 600 dpi and saved as JPEG files. Scans were then further analyzed for the ring clarity under mag- nifícation. Saved images were then exported into MSPowerpoint® and ring count performed using digital line and tic marks. The annuli of the vertebrae were counted from the centmm to the edge of each specimen. A grouping of one dark band (winter band) and one light band (summer band) represented one year of the fish's life. Atlas vertebrae were also used to reconstmct the live size of fish (Enghoff 1994). The results for the Age recon- straction for Akurvík and Gjögur are pre- sented in figure 8. While this method is still somewhat experimental and is in need of further development, it would appear that fisheries zooarchaeologists will be able to provide age and season of death information even when the fragile otoliths usually employed by fisheries biologists have not survived in archaeo- logical contexts. Discussion: Fishing Farms and Fishing Stations The Gjögur midden is the product of a wide range of activities carried out year round to provision a household as well as to generate potential surplus product, and the ephemeral Akurvík booths were occupied seasonally a few months every year by boat crews involved exclusively in físhing and marine hunting whose profits were consumed elsewhere. The 43
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