Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 102

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 102
VÉRONIQUE FORBES, ALLISON BAIN, GUÐRÚN ALDA GÍSLADÓTTIR AND KAREN B. MILEK very high number of fleas in buildings where eider down was being dried and/or stored in the present day at Vatnsfjörður and Æðey (also located in the Westfjords). Furthermore, the presence of Ptinus tectus indicates that it is also possible that the inhabitants of Vatnsfjörður used this room to store dried or salted físh, smoked puffin meat or mutton (see Larsson & Gígja 1959, 168- 169). Fish hooks were also found in the deposit, suggesting the storage of fishing equipment. The presence of ten sheep keds also indicates that sheep skins were amongst the stored products or that wool processing was carried out in the cellar or in its vicinity. Specimens of T. unicolor have been found in other early modem floors and midden deposits at the Icelandic sites of Bessastaðir (Amorosi et al. 1992, 181), Nesstofa (Amorosi et al. 1994, 74), Reykholt (Buckland et al. 1992), and Skálholt (Konraðsdóttir 2006), though never in such abundance. It has been recorded, sometimes in high numbers, in British sites (e.g. Hall et al. 1980; Kenward et al. 1995), where it is consid- ered to be a typical component of the fauna found in house floor deposits, and a good indicator of long-lived buildings because of its poor dispersing capacities (Kenward 2009, 308-310). Thus, the pres- ence of many specimens of this spider beetle in occupation deposits from the cel- lar, as well as the absence of stratigraphic divisions within the floor layer, might be the result of a rather long and continuous occupation. As stated earlier, the cellar was in use as part of the 1884-1906 house and probably after this date, as suggested by the results of the site excavation (Ævarsson & Gísladóttir 2008) and docu- mentary evidence (Þorsteinsson 2006). ■ Fauna associated with mouldy hay □ Dung feeders □ Pests of stored products ■ Outdoor fauna B Fauna associated with organic matter □ Ectoparasites Figure 12. Comparison of the distribution of insects from context A-E according to their ecological preferences. 100
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Archaeologia Islandica

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