Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 80

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 80
DOUGLAS J. BOLENDER, JOHN M. STEINBERG AND BRIAN N. DAMIATA Norse sites that date back to the earliest farmsteads in the Faroes, Iceland, and Greenland. As he notes, farm-mounds present a problem both of explanation and methodology for North Atlantic archaeologists. We have relatively few excavations of farm-mounds, in large part due to the difficulty and the expense involved in their excavation, and thus the overwhelming majority of our knowledge of the Viking Age is derived not from the earliest phases of farm-mounds but rather from sites that were abandoned or relocated at the end of the Viking Age. Put simply, most of our information about the North Altantic Viking Age is derived from abondoned or relocated sites that may be atypical. In fact, the archaeological sample is so heavily biased that there is relatively little information on how these fannsteads compare to those that have remained in the same place throughout their history. The completion of a systematic settlement pattem for the Langholt region of Skagatjörður confirms that most Icelandic farmsteads were established during the Viking Age and that only a small percentage of them relocated while most remained in the same place as originally established. In our survey, which covered 22 farmsteads, only two were relocated, indicating that only a small percentage (ca. 10%) of farmsteads have Viking Age components that are easily accessible to archaeologists. The two relocated farmsteads were also among the largest Viking Age farmsteads in the survey region. Thus, relocated farmsteads are both rare and unusually large, at least in the survey area. Regional Survey and the Skagafjörður Archaeological Settlement Survey In general, survey methods in Iceland have relied heavily on historical documentation, air photos, landowner interviews, and surface survey. The paucity of durable Viking Age and medieval material culture make it difficult to date sites based on surface finds (Smith and Parsons 1989). This is especially problematic in lowland areas where rapid soil deposition has buried many early sites (cf. Catlin 2011; Guðbergsson 1975) and contemporary field smoothing and plowing have often eliminated telltale signs of buried turf buildings. Understanding how relocated farmsteads compare to other sites requires methodologies capable of identifying buried farmstead sites, estimating their size, and dating the earliest deposits. Archaeologists working in Iceland are weli aware of these biases and their potential impact on site selection and the reconstruction of early settlement pattems and chronologies (Friðriksson 1994; Steinberg and Bolender 2005; Vésteinsson 2004; Vésteinsson, et al. 2002). However, at the regional level, the systematic implementation of subsurface survey methods, such as soil coring, geophysical surveying, and targeted test excavations has been limited due to a lack of tested methodologies and the costs involved. Over an eight year period (2001-2009) The Skagafjörður Archaeological Settlement Survey (SASS) experimented with and implemented novel survey protocols to systematically identify, date, and characterize 22 farms in and around the Langholt region of Skagafjörður. The 78
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Archaeologia Islandica

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