Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 16

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 16
ORRI VÉSTEINSSON Norwegian farm-mounds Norwegian archaeologists have treated them primarily as evidence for social and economic change. In contrast Icelandic archaeolo- gists have considered farm-mounds main- ly as a product of construction techniques. As a result very little discussion has taken place within Icelandic archaeology on this issue, despite the fact that farm-mounds are much better researched and a more central part of Icelandic archaeology than in Norway (although see Buckland et al. 1994). The different perspective of the Icelandic archaeologists - and the same holds for their Faroese and Greenlandic counterparts - is explained by farm- mounds apparently having accumulated from the very beginning of settlement in these countries. Farm-mounds are as a result not considered as a symptom of change but a permanent fíxture of the archaeological landscape. Icelandic archaeologists have been much more con- cemed with the related issue of the spatial development of farmhouses, seeking to interpret changes in layout as meaningíul Hannesson 1943, Roussell 1943a, 1953, Guðmundur Ólafsson 1982, Hörður Ágústsson 1982, 1986, 1987, 1989, Price 1995, Orri Vésteinsson 2002). Although it is inspired by the debate on North Norwegian farm-mounds my discussion of farm-mounds concentrates on the Icelandic evidence - and inevitably on the particular conditions that may have contributed to their devel- opment in that country. There is still scope, and great need, for a systematic comparison and debate between the dif- ferent regions of the the North Atlantic, in order to more fully understand this intriguing phenomenon. In the following I will be making ffe- quent references to the excavation of the Stóraborg farm-mound where I had the good fortune to work for several seasons in the late 1980s. Much of what I have to say about farm-mounds began to form in my mind back then and has benefited from the expert tutelage of Mjöll Snæsdóttir, the excavator of Stóraborg. This paper is writ- ten in tribute to her. But what is the problem about farm- moimds that needs to be explained? On the one hand there is a technical issue: How do farm-mounds form? What processes are involved and how do they differ from depositional processes at farm sites where mounds do not accumulate? And following on from that: what is the significance of that difference? Is the tem- poral and spatial distribution of farm- mounds in the North Atlantic an indication of a particular technology? Economic strategy? Ethnicity? Social structure? Environmental constraints? Or all or some combination of these factors? Both prob- lems need to be solved, and the second set of questions cannot be answered unless firm understanding has been reached on the technical issue. Before this is consid- ered I would like to briefly introduce Icelandic farm-mound studies as these form the background to my argument. Where relevant I also include references to Greenlandic evidence. Icelandic farm-mounds Archaeologists have long known that in Iceland farm houses have been built over and over again on the same spot for cen- turies, often forming deep stratigraphies
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