Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 22

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 22
OSCAR ALDRED settlement of Iceland based its thesis on understanding the landscape through an ecological heritage approach as one that combined the more common dichoto- my of nature::culture (Bjarni Einars- son 1995). It used the perception of the landscape as a means of understanding the decision-making process in colonisa- tion and crucially, for his study, the cul- tural identity of the colonisers, drawing specifically on architectural typologies along with the economic resources held in landscape and the technologies used to exploit them. As a study of landscape the thesis sought to derive an alternative tradition in archaeology, contra the ideas that have characterised Icelandic archae- ology before it, namely its historical tra- dition without critical review, through a quasi-phenomenological yet ecological landscape hypothesis about settlement. Whilst the landscape idea is present, it essentially becomes the study of material culture from one site, Granastaðir, with- out a clear approach in the use of archae- ological theory, especially phenomenol- ogy. The clarity of the full implications of the thesis after its extrapolation on the broader landscape becomes hard to see which partially hindered its wider appli- cation in Iceland. In 1989 a systematic survey program in Iceland started that continues today. Although these are commissioned by local authorities in advance of strate- gic local planning, they have attempted a total survey of the archaeological land- scape. The survey is a combination of historical research, especially the first documented date as well as the history of a farm, contemporary local knowl- edge and place name information and in the field recording of visible archaeol- ogy. This programme has stimulated the growth of archaeology in Iceland and provided opportunities for researchers to create new types of archaeological prod- ucts. Unfortunately, due to the contractual nature of the work, there has been little synthesis of the survey data that has been collected over the last 15 years or so. The archaeological information includes opportunities to study the spatial arrange- ments of archaeological sites against other types of data, such as heights, land uses and political geographies. It also has the potential to influence the development of heritage management applications, par- ticularly those associated with monitor- ing individual sites and landscapes. The importance of the survey for landscape work can not be overstated if landscape research is to develop. A number of recent and in progress research projects have particular emphasis on landscape within several dif- ferent approaches. Some are area based, or situated in themes or a combination of both, as well as beyond the site studies. These are the Landscape cirum landnám project (Edwards et al 2005), the bound- ary systems project in north-east Iceland (Árni Einarsson et al 2002), the pre- Christian burial (kumt) project (Krístján Eldjárn 2000, 589-592), the Assembly project (þingstaðir) (Adolf Friðriksson et al 2005). Also, focused excavations at Hólar, Skálholt, and Vatnsfjörður are all contextualised by landscape work (Ragn- heiður Traustadóttir and Guðný Zöega 2006; Mjöll Snæsdóttir et al 2006; Aldred 2005). Emerging themes on the idea of landscape in Icelandic archaeology Landscape archaeology in Iceland has taken a journey from an antiquarianism closely connected to an intrinsic asso- 20

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