Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 75

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 75
THE ICELANDIC WHETSTONE MATERIAL - AN OVERVIEW OF RECENT RESEARCH whetstones in post-medieval contexts. The whole whetstones differ in weight from around 10 g to 775 g and include everything from small pendant whetstones, kept around the neck, in pouches or suspended from belts as personal possessions, to large whetstone blocks for stationary use in sharpening larger implements. On average, the small to medium-sized whetstones weigh around 50 g in the analyzed Viking Age and early medieval collections in Iceland. The need for whetstones depends on the types and variation in activities taking place, e.g. extensive house-building/turf-cutting and growing grain/harvesting requires sharp metal implements and intensive use of whetstones. Everyday life also required whetstones and the smaller examples, such as the pendant whetstones probably served an important role for smaller tools, such as personal knifes and needles that needed regular, but less intensive sharpening. Medium-sized whetstones could also be carried around, such as for example the scythe whetstones that were used frequently during harvesting season. Specialized crafls also required certain whetstone types, but this is a complicated aspect since the excavated assemblages come primarily from rural farmsteads with no or little sign of craftsmanship. There are, however, examples from the Icelandic collections showing very distinct grinding marks and groves which does hold potential for understanding their specialized use. Degree of fragmentation Relative accessibility of whetstones was estimated by looking at the degree of fragmentation and intensively of use in the individual whetstone collections. In general, it is expected that most stones in the collections are smaller than the size they had originally. Oftcn breakage and reuse after breakage can be detected. Such intensive use of the material is also recorded in the 20th century where ethnographic records describe how young boys were given the broken whetstones to sharpen their scythes when leaming to work in the fields (Matthíasson and Einarsson2). These broken ends were mounted into sheep hom, allowing for use of small ffagments. It is therefore not surprising that the archaeological record only preserves a small number of large whetstones. It was not that they did not exist or were not needed in the household, but the evidence simply reflects that the material was used to its fullest extent, leaving primarily small whetstone remains to be found in archaeological contexts. Inter-site variation is visible, as some sites showed small amounts of potentially usable whetstones whereas others almost exclusively contained broken whetstones and fragments not usable for grinding purposes. In spite of this variation, all Viking Age and early medieval settlement sites in Iceland have one thing in common: no site shows an abundance of discarded usable schist whetstones, meaning that the material 2 Mentioned in several of the questionnaires sent out by the ethnographic department of the National Museum of Iceland, e.g. Þjóðháttadeild “030 - Heyannir V” See: Haraldur Matthíasson (1603083389) Laugarvatn, source nr. Nr 3515 and “016 - Torfskurður og móverk” see: Guðmundur Steinn Einarsson (2805172599) source nr. Nr. 2792 73
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Archaeologia Islandica

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