Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 86

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 86
George Hambrecht the Galloway were not developed until the seventeenth century and if the cattle represented by this midden were imports this might suggest a date within this period (Van Bath, 1963; Trow-Smith, 1954; Overton, 1996). The artifactual and stratigraphic evidence strongly point to a 17th century date for this midden depos- it though the early to mid 18th century should not be completely ruled out. Throughout the North Atlantic Scandinavian cultural sphere, the usual domestic-mammal zooarchaeological as- semblage reflects economies that concent- rated on dairy production. Three elements make Skálholt’s unit 454 unique within this North Atlantic context. The first is the overwhelming presence of cattle in the assemblage. No other known archaeo- faunal context from Iceland or the North Atlantic region is so dominated by cattle. Not only is unit 454 clearly dominated by cattle but the total percentage of cattle in the archaeofauna so far analysed from Skálholt is high, 57%. This percentage should increase as the finds from the 2006 season are also dominated by cattle bones. The second is a zooarchaeological profile indicating dedicated beef produc- tion, relative to Iceland, the first among non-modern archaeofauna from Iceland. Finally, the cattle represented by this as- semblage were a new breed either brought in from Europe or bred from Icelandic cattle. Any of these conditions alone in an Icelandic context in any period would be exceptional (McGovern, et al 2001). To find all three is remarkable and merits further consideration. The midden containing con- text 454 was, judging from contempo- rary maps, close to and possibly associ- ated with a meat store room. Among the butchery-related artifacts were a piece of whale bone butcher’s block and a possible small cetacea (porpoise or dolphin) bone knife handle. The midden is located along the edge of a road that ran through a com- plex of outbuildings south of the Bishop’s residence. It was formed via a series of dumps of refuse, ash and fill over the edge of the road. Context 454 was the only stratum in group 383 associated with large quantities of well-preserved, whole animal bones. It is an extremely dense deposit, with very little sediment present among the closely packed and entangled bone fragments. Because the adjacent thin peat ash deposits interdigitate with it, context 454 seems to represent an accre- tion of multiple dumps occurring over a fairly short time period. Table 1 presents a count of the identified specimens (NISP 4,227) and the less well identified categories of “Large Terrestrial Mammal” (LTM), “Medium Terrestrial Mammal” (MTM), and “Small Terrestrial Mammal” (STM) as well as unidentified mammal bone fragments contributing to the overall bone count (TNF) of 19,519. Table 2 presents the count of fragments (NISP) and relative percentage of domestic mammals. Cattle dominate the domestic mammal assem- blage; caprines (sheep and goat) together make up less than 15% of the deposit. Of the unidentifiable mammal bones, LTM make up a similar majority in proportion to MTM as cattle to caprines in the NISP. Considering that equids are represented by only three elements, and that the pro- portions between bos versus other mam- mals and LTM versus MTM are similar, it is not too risky to associate LTM with cattle. Finding cattle at a high-status site such as Skálholt is not out of the ordinary, but to find an assemblage so 84

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Archaeologia Islandica

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