Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 66

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 66
Heather B. Trigg, Douglas J. Bolender, Katharine M. Johnson, Marisa D. Patalano, and John M. Steinberg NOTE ON BARLEY FOUND IN DUNG IN THE LOWEST LEVELS OF THE FARM MOUND MIDDEN AT REYNISTAÐUR, SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ICELAND As part of the work of the Skagafjörður Archaeological Settlement Survey (SASS), the authors identified bumt barley in a dung matrix at the lowest levels of the Reynistaður farm mound midden (between ca. 870 and 1000 AD). Barley in dung, with other wetland seeds, suggests to us that a traditional agro-pastoral Scandinavian package may have been used at Reynistaður from its settlement. Heather B. Trigg, (Heather.Trigg@umb.edu) Katharine M. Johnson, Marisa Patalano, andJohn M. Steinberg, Fiske Centerfor Archaeological Research, UMass Boston 100 Morrissey Blvd. Boston MA 02125 Douglas J. Bolender, lnstitute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology, University at Buffalo, 380 MFAC - Ellicott Complex, Buffalo, NY14261-0005 Keywords: paleoethnobotany, archaeobotany, Viking Age, cultivation, fodder, manure Introduction While the consumption of barley in Viking Age Iceland has never been doubted, questions remain regarding the extent to which barley was imported or grown locally. Sagas document cultiva- tion of barley in Viking Age Iceland in various locations (e.g., Þórarinsson 1956) and there is circumstantial evidence for barley cultivation in the archaeological record (e.g., Nordahl 1988:101), and the potential for barley production in the environmental record (Simpson et al 2002). However, there is also evidence of Viking Age grain importation (Buckland et al 1990). Thus the scope and nature of grain agriculture and place of traditional Scandinavian infield-outfield farming practices in Viking Age Iceland is unclear (Ross and Zutter 2007; Zutter 1999). Here we report on a find of burnt barley in a dung matrix at the lowest levels of the Reynistaður farm mound midden (after ca. 870 AD and well before 1000 AD). This find suggests that a traditional agro-pastoral Scandinavian package may have been used at Reynistaður from its earliest occupation. Since 2001, the Skagafjörður Archaeological Settlement Survey (SASS) has been developing subsurface archaeological methods as a part of col- Archaeologia Islandica 7 (2009) 64-72

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Archaeologia Islandica

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