Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 28

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 28
RAGNAR EDVARDSSON • ARNAR ÞÓR EGILSSON archaeological sites were discovered even though the sample areas were relatively small when compared to the overall size of the JJords (Table 1). The seabed in the surveyed areas is similar in general terms and the seabed in almost all places consists of sand, gravel and rocks. The fjords extending towards the south from ísafjarðardjúp fjord have similar seabed composition as the Patreks- and Tálknafjörður fjords in the south and Reykjarfjörður and Hveravík in Strandir. The historical research suggests the potential for a number underwater sites around the Vestfirðir peninsula. In the period 1875 - 1890 on average 1.75 Icelandic fishing boats sunk in Vestfirðir per year and in the same period 6 large foreign ships perished. Further historic research into ship disasters around Iceland have shown that on average 1.12 large ships sunk in different places around the country in the 14th century (Islenskir Annálar 1847). The high number of ship losses in these two different periods demonstrates the possibilities of shipwrecks from all periods in the waters around Iceland. The survey showed that land based sites such as whaling stations usually have a submerged archaeological sites in the vicinity. All whaling stations, both those fforn the late 19th and early 17th centuries, recorded submerged archaeology in their immediate neighborhood. Submerged archaeology was also recorded by the old trading posts even though the areas had been damaged by modem consfructions as these sites developed into villages in the 20th century. The side-scan sonar survey indicated a number of possible sites in all the surveyed areas but these still need to be examined in more detail (Fig. 11). Discussion There is a need for further research into the deterioration of underwater archaeological sites in Vestfirðir and Iceland in general as the survey demonstrated that individual sites showed a clear difference in deterioration. Some of the older sites had remained more stable and were relatively intact while younger sites had more or less disappeared. The shipwreck in Álftafjörður is in a good condition after 109 years underwater while the trawler Euripides is completely broken up after 89 years on the seabed. It is likely that different environmental factors are at work on these two sites resulting in different preservation. Studies have shown that various natural factors determine the level of destmction on submerged archaeological sites and they differ between areas. These factors are many and the right combination can destroy a site in a relatively short time while their absence can preserve a site for centuries. Currents, temperature, level of oxygen saturation, depth, salinity and micro-organisms all play an important role and sites that are in a cold and low oxygen saturated environment will generally preserve better than sites in warm and high oxygen saturated environment (Poumou, A., Jones, A.M., Moss, S.T. 2001: 299-305). It is likely that the closed Ijord systems in Vestfirðir offer a better preservation for archaeological sites than those areas that are open to the oceans. Recent study in Amarijörður fjord suggests that a natural 26
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Archaeologia Islandica

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