Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 21

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 21
ON FARM MOUNDS varies with climate, acidity of soil and precipitation, drainage, chemical condi- tions on site - especially as regards organic preservation - and a range of other factors. In addition to degradation from natural causes material may be removed intentionally from a site or dis- tributed in such a way that it does not form deep stratigraphies. These basic premises hold true for all deep stratigraphies, whether they are Near Eastern tells, medieval towns or North Atlantic farm-mounds. Farm- mounds are therefore no unique phenom- enon; deep stratigraphies can be expected in all cultures where settlements are sta- ble and localised. Not all such settlement sites form deep stratigraphies however and it is therefore reasonable to look fírst for the environmental or chemical rea- sons behind the development of farm- mounds. Although figures for volume are not available Icelandic excavators of farm- mounds agree that the bulk of the materi- al comprising their farm-mounds is building material, i.e. turf and to a lesser extent stone (e.g. Mjöll Snæsdóttir 1991 a, 118; Margrét Hallgrímsdóttir 199lb, 115-16). It is only at the very largest mounds, such as Bessastaðir (which is more than fíve times larger in volume than Stóraborg) where ash seems to make up signifícant proportions of the accumulation (Fig. 5). It seems however that this is exceptional and relates mainly to the very highest status sites. Turf architecture requires vast amounts of turf and loose soil to be brought on site. The difference in volume from pure timber constructions, wattle and daub or even brick or stone architec- ture is up to 10 times greater. The timber in the walls of a hypothetical structure with the dimensions 5x20x2 (excluding the roof) has the volume 20 m3 if the walls are 0,2 m thick. The walls of a turf house with the same dimensions would have the volume 168 m3 if the walls are 1,5 m thick or 224m3 if the walls are 2 m thick. In addition the turf house also needs a timber frame and quite often con- tains a whole timber building inside the turf walls. Of greater importance is how- ever the fact that materials like timber and stone, and to some extent brick, can be reused to a considerable degree, each building phase therefore leaving only small volumes of unusable or inaccessi- ble materials in the ground when the next is built on top. Turf on the other hand can as a rule not be reused, except as filling in the cores of new turf walls, requiring the bulk of dilapidated turf walls to be either levelled out on top of the earlier founda- tions or removed from site. To confound this even further, turf is an unstable construction material which easily erodes, cracks, crumbles or falls from under its own weight. It therefore needs constant repairs with small quanti- ties of new turf being added on an annual to decadal basis (Guðmundur L. Friðfinnsson 1991, 207, 209) and neces- sitating complete rebuilding every 60 to 100 years (see below). This means that the replacement rate of turf structures is much greater than of most other building materials used in Northem Europe. The external factors contributing to the destruction of turf walls are precipita- tion, frost and erosion. Rainwater enters 19
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Archaeologia Islandica

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