Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Page 67

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Page 67
Note on barley found at Reynistaður Figure 1. Map showing Skagafjörður with sites mentioned. lecting settlement pattem data for the area between Reynistaður and Víðimýri in Skagaíjörður (Steinberg and Bolender 2004; Figure 1). Survey at Reynistaður conducted in 2001-2002 included shal- low geophysical prospection and system- atic coring of the homefíeld area fol- lowed by a series of assessment excava- tions. The survey has identified a number of outbuildings in the homefíeld and demonstrated a continuous occupation of the primary farm mound dating to the initial settlement of Iceland. Reynistaður appears to be the earliest farm in the immediate vicinity and is one of the earli- est farms lying just north of the Langholt region. Setting and Methods Reynistaður, originally called Staður in Reynines, is the farmstead of the only Earl of Iceland, Gissur Þorvaldsson, who diedin 1268AD(McGrew 1970;McGrew and Thomas 1974). Before that, some- time in the lOth century, it was said to be the home of Þórður hesthöfði Snorrason and of his son, Þorfinnur karlsefnis, one of the early European settlers of Vínland (Kunz 2000). The farmstead is mentioned in several family sagas as well as in the Sturlunga sagas when it was a prominent estate of the Asbimingar family. The farm continued to be an important eco- nomic and political center after the end of the Commonwealth as the site of a con- vent and as a parish seat. Reynistaður is situated where the Sæmundar River (Sæmundará) enters the fjord bottom and tums north to flow to the sea as the Reynistaður River (Staðará). The bend in the river has cut the south and east edges of the primary farm mound exposing up to 2.5 meters of domestic deposits (Figure 2). The midden begins just above the green Landnám tephra layer (LNL) dated from Greenland ice cores to AD 871±2 (Grönvold, et al. 1995) and AD 877±4 (Zielinski, et al. 1997). The farm mound was stabilized by 2003 with a bolder dyke placed along the bank of the river preventing further erosion of the deposit. In the summer of 2004 two profile sections were cleaned, drawn and photo- graphed. The top of the main section of the southern profile is at E 573372.9, N 474202.8 and 8.5m above MSL (ISNET93). Both exposed profiles indicate intensive and continuous cultural activity following the LNL deposition (Figure 3 & 4). Both profiles have the same tephra layers and similar cultural deposits including the V-1000 AD, the 1104 AD (Fil) and prehis- 65

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Archaeologia Islandica

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