Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 68

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 68
SIGRID CECILIE JUEL HANSEN doctoral work Kuml and Haugfé from 1954, which broadly and in few paragraphs mentions the material found in Iceland. In addition, whetstones are commonly described in the artifact sections of preliminary excavation reports, but rarely in any great length. The exception is the recently published monograph of the Hofstaðir excavations (Lucas ed. 2009), which presents a thorough analysis of the whetstones with artifactual analysis by Colleen Batey and petrological analysis by the geologist Helge Askvik, who has conducted the major studies of the whetstones from Haithabu and Kaupang with Heid Resi (1992 and 2008). In addition Kevin Smith has carried out geochemical and chronometric analyses to identify potential source areas for whetstones foimd in Iceland and his work is in process for publication. A problem faced in this study is the lack of information about foreign whetstone collections from sites comparable to the Icelandic archaeological sites. Research on whetstones is rather limited in general and the material that has been analyzed and published is primarily írom towns, trading sites and other high status settlements. The Icelandic sites, on the other hand, are primarily rural, consisting of farmhouses of varying status with no or little evidence of large scale trade or exchange. This makes comparisons problematic. Although not directly comparable, it is nevertheless valuable to consider the whetstone material outside Iceland. It throws light on the principal pattems and trends, in particular in connection to the stone types used as whetstone material in the different sites and the varying proportions of the different geological source material found abroad and in Iceland. Four sites, all belonging to the Westem Viking Age trade routes, were chosen for comparative material: Hedeby in northem Germany close to the Danish border, Kaupang close to modem day Oslo, Borg in Lofoten in northem Norway, and York in northem England. In addition, provenance studies of whetstones from several Scandinavian, Baltic and British sites also supplied very useful background knowledge of whetstone trade in general. The analysis of whetstone collections ffom Viking Age and medieval contexts were carried out during the years 2006-2009, as part of my MA thesis “Whetstones ífom Viking Age Iceland - As part of the Trans-Atlantic trade in basic commodities (2009)”. In addition, Bragason (2008) has analyzed a few post-medieval sites and considered the use of local Icelandic whetstone sources. The material was registered in a simple excel database in order to systematically analyze the whetstones according to type, shape, size and use (see fig.l). The Icelandic collection was registered, largely using the same methods as Heid G. Resi used in her analysis of the whetstone material ffom Haithabu (Resi 1990) and Kaupang (Resi 2008). Geological source material Within the Icelandic collections as a whole it has been possible to distinguish three main source materials: Eidsborg schist, a dark grey schist, and an Icelandic dolerite. A small group (1-5%) of 66
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Archaeologia Islandica

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