Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 72

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 72
RAMONA HARRISON Perdikaris and McGovem 2008:73-77). A second way of ascertaining which part of the gadid fílet may have arrived at Skuggi is to compare the relative abun- dance of vertebral series, i.e. thoracic, precaudal, and caudal vertebrae. The Skuggi gadid vertebral series thus far include only the caudal (tail) ver- tebrae and none from the upper portion of the físh. This pattern suggests that the people at Skuggi likely supplied them- selves with a flattened, air dried product, where the upper thoracic and precaudal vertebrae have been largely removed along with the head (Perdikaris & McGovern 2008:64). This profile dis- playing a klipfisk-like product at Skuggi is nicely mirrored in a 'producer' profile in some Gjögur midden contexts, with the gadid head, thoracic, and precaudal vertebrae discarded as offal during pro- duction of a small, flattened and dried product for export from this site. Skuggi is not located 50 - 70 km inland as are Sveigakot, Hrísheimar, Hofstaðir, and other Mývatnssveit sites reflecting an inland trade of processed gadid species, but the 20 km distance to the coast and its location on the slopes of Hörgárdalur still place it into an inland environment. The Skuggi gadid fish and the odd Halibut were most likely brought to the site in a processed form; likely split open, although it is not sure whether they were only flattened and dried (klipfisk), or dried and salted (bacalao). The few cranial bones in the lower deposits could be from one whole fish, from one dried fish head consumed by humans, or the result of a scavenger importing cranial elements from a coastal processing area. The Skuggi marine fish assemblage so far indicates that the products were likely imported in processed form and were part of a typical Viking Age/early medieval site subsistence pattern. The sample size is too small to make any gen- eral assessments on the local fish econo- my employed (Prof. Sophia Perdikaris, personal communication, September 27, 2010). This access to a fish product processed elsewhere does however sug- gest that Skuggi was firmly connected to the Hörgárdalur community (the archaeo- fauna from Vígishellir presents a very clear example of which food animals were available to people who may have been outlaws and as such not permitted access to communally distributed foods (McGovem 2003). Access and claims to natural resources While the Skuggi residents seem to have been part of a larger social constmct, their status in this potentially hierarchic regional power stmcture may have been a low one. They potentially were not free to choose their own herding strategy and likely had very limited access to the natu- ral resources in their surrounding. This is clearly indicated by the lack in certain species to expect in a Hörgárdalur archaeofauna. The natural resource issue may be a further clue that Skuggi was operated as a holder farm and the landowners may have resided further away, claiming some of the natural species on their land for themselves. Freshwater fish The total fish assemblage analyzed so far 70
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