Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Qupperneq 119

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Qupperneq 119
ON the precipice: aerial archaeology in iceland might be familiar to those in Europe the situations and the conditions under which it was created, are perhaps somewhat different. The most common type of archaeological site is by far earthworks, and even if they may be amorphous in form they often contain common characteristics that help determine their particular functions. For example, early sheep houses have a different shape, in general, to later ones, and Viking period long-houses are quite distinct from other types of domestic structures. Many of the farms that were established in the earliest settlement of Iceland are still occupied and the general assumption is that many of these lie on top of the earliest structures that are contained within a farm mound, which might be compared to a small Middle Eastem tell. This fact of continuity is often assumed, but little is really known conceming localised settlement shifts, which in many parts of Europe are quite common. Although many of the first generations of settlers in Iceland seem to have chosen locations for their farms that have (to our present knowledge) remained stable throughout the centuries, some of the early locations of settlement seem to have been abandoned, either because of social or environmental factors. In these cases settlement remains of earlier centuries can be seen on the surface and are not buried beneath later farm mounds. As Iceland became more densely populated, the edges of settlement moved closer to the highlands. In later times as the climate deteriorated and the population decreased these marginal settlements receded and were abandoned, particularly in the innermost parts of valleys or side-valleys or up on the edges of the highlands. Many such areas were never re-settled and thus remain undamaged by later activity. From the late-nineteenth century, but especially since the mid-twentieth century, Iceland, like other countries in Europe, experienced rapidly changing settlement pattems. Large parts of a once flourishing countryside were abandoned through migration to newly emerging urban centres. Unlike many mral areas in Europe, mechanisation did not happen on a large scale in Iceland until the second half of 201*1 century. Consequently, those farms that were abandoned during this period often have home fields that have not been levelled by machines, and often old turf and stone stmctures are well preserved. This kind of abandonment and relocation are among the main reasons for the preservation of visible ruins in Iceland. After the introduction of agricultural machinery, the levelling of home fields has damaged a large proportion of mins on those farms still lived on. In these places the best surviving archaeology is, with few exceptions, found outside the home field, in the remains of shielings, shelters and sheep folds, tracks, caims, boundaries (both property boundaries as well as land use partitioning) and quarries (such as peat or turf cutting areas). Other factors, such as natural erosion have also contributed to the destruction of archaeological remains, especially desertiflcation, and while urban and industrial development have had a much 117
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Archaeologia Islandica

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