Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 35

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 35
ON FARM MOUNDS as the order of magnitude is likely to have been not much more than a step up here or a step down there. Many later farms were built on an incline and at Laufás the íloors of the buildings at the end of the long central corridor were 1,5 m higher than the front door, and each of the rooms branching off from the corridor are 0,3- 0,5 m higher relative to its floor. Such differences may therefore create no seri- ous problems for day to day living but they can have significant consequences for the build-up of farm-mounds. In par- ticular it is easy to see that when a room is rebuilt which has a lower floor level than adjoining rooms there will be no rea- son to maintain that level but a good rea- son to fíll it in, with the unusable turf from the walls being replaced. Thus the multi-celled layout of late and post- Viking age farmhouses will have exacer- bated the effect of floor build-up explained above: not only may floors in those parts of the farmhouse with most activity have increased more in thickness, than if the house was a single celled structure, but the effects of that increase will have been exponentially greater. A 10 cm thick floor will not only have resulted in 10 cm of the surrounding walls being left in at rebuilding but also a 1-10 cm fíll on top of lower floors in other rooms as well as 10 cm of the walls of those structures. This means that while a single celled house of the dimensions 20x5 m with a 10 cm thick floor leaves 20 m3 of floor and wall material on site at rebuilding, a same sized hall with a 3x3 m annex will leave as much as 27 m3, nearly four times as much on account of the annexe as the larger room (Fig. 14). Add to this that wall volumes seem to be signifícantly greater in multi-celled farm- houses, with wall area to floor area ratios of 3:1 at Sandártunga (from 1693) and 2:1 at Gröf (from 1362) compared to 1:1 or less in single celled Viking age halls like Isleifsstaðir and Aðalstræti. Those greater volumes will also have con- tributed to the build up of farm-mounds. An accelerating process There are grounds to believe that the process of farm-mound accumulation was slow at fírst but accelerated with time and increased volume. This is partly 1 1 1 l l . 1 1 1 1 1 fill / \ l 1 1 1 1 1 wall floor wall 0 1 2 meters floor wall 14. Schematic cross-section of an Icelandic turf house showing how a multi-cellular layout exacerbates accumulation of floor and wall materials. Drawing by Stefán Olafsson 33
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Archaeologia Islandica

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