Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Qupperneq 20

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Qupperneq 20
OSCAR ALDRED abandonment from excavation and docu- mentary evidence, the figures illustrated a progressive pattern of settlement change through time. However, the detailed inter- pretation of the variation in patterning was not explained, though there are clear- ly specific local influences that have dic- tated the settlement and abandonment of farms, particularly in Eyjafjallasveit (Guðrún Sveinbjarnardóttir 1984, 48-49 (fig 8), 52-53 (fig 9)). The study was a pioneering one for Iceland developing further the ideas outlined in pan-Nordic study and, it is argued, established the key research questions that have dominated Icelandic archaeology in recent years: environmental change and human responses to it and their impact on the landscape (Gissel, S et al. 1981). Increasing diversity in approac- hes to landscape research characterise the work after Guðrún Sveinbjarnardóttir’s study. Following a similar theme, though testing the relationships between environ- mental conditions and society was the arable fields project, a study on the early agricultural evidence in Iceland (Garðar Guðmundsson et al 2004). It contextual- ised the archaeology by introducing the historical information on arable agricul- ture and assessing this in relation to the assumptions that by the fourteenth centu- ry arable farming ceased to continue due to deteriorating climatic conditions. The field work approach combined historical research (especially through place name evidence) aerial survey, field survey and limited excavation with palynology. The conclusions of the project suggested that although climatic factors were important in the decline of arable farming it was soil and land management that were criti- cal limiting factors in early grain produc- tion. Another landscape study, per- haps in the tradition of Brynjúlfur Jóns- son’s and Stenberger’s Þjórsárdalur is the Landscape of settlements project (Adolf Friðriksson et al 2005). This was an extensive but detailed study on Viking and Medieval settlement in the Mývatn environs that used an inter-disciplinary approach. The excavations at Hofstaðir, Sveigakot, Hriseimar and Höfðagerði, formed the primary archaeological evi- dence, as well as several smaller evalua- tions of other sites in Mývatn. The exca- vation work was integrated with other related research being carried out in the region, in particular the assessment of animal bones found at these sites and others in Iceland, as well as the environ- mental research that assessed climate, soils and the ecology. Due to continu- ing work in the region, the archaeologi- cal data from each investigation has yet to be fully synthesised, though several emerging landscape pattems are appar- ent. Within a changing and deteriorating climate between the ninth and fourteenth centuries there were shifts in the econo- mies of the local inhabitants, particularly in food sources, as well as settlement change, both on sites and between them. There also seems to have been a more than expected regulation and manage- ment of grazing land, particularly around the Hofstaðir site (Simpson et al 2004). This project’s results are of particular interest to the study of past landscapes, especially as the information has been collected over a long period and includes a range of source material collected using modern techniques (scientific dat- ing, tephra analysis, palynology) which broadens our understanding of landscape that is a regional in its perspective. Bjarni Einarsson’s study of the 18
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Archaeologia Islandica

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