Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 82

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 82
DOUGLAS J. BOLENDER, JOHN M. STEINBERG AND BRIAN N. DAMIATA SASS project was designed to address the problems in survey bias by augmenting existing survey methods with a suite of subsurface methods - primarily soil coring and reconnaissance geophysical surveying - that can identify and map buried sites (Steinberg and Bolender 2005). The protocol can provide basic variables on the Viking Age components of both farm-mounds and buried farmstead sites: location, date of establishment (and abandonment), and an estimation of the area covered by the farmstead buildings and middens. Viking Age farmstead size is estimated by modeling the distribution of turf, midden, and other cultural debris found below the 1104 Hekla in geographic information systems software. The model was based on the results of systematic coring, geophysical sui-veying, and test excavations in and around each Viking Age farmstead. These variables yield a settlement pattern and allow for a comparative basis for site assessment. As a second phase, more intensive geophysical surveying of selected sites was conducted to map individual buildings and help target excavations. Efforts to map sites have had mixed results; ones that largely mimic the existing biases in survey methodology. Single or relatively simple Viking Age farmsteads can be largely mapped using coring, geophysical surveying, and targeted test excavations at a substantially lower cost in labor and time than traditional excavation but so far it has been difficult to interpret the geophysical results ffom complex farm-mounds into coherent structures or occupational phases, especially in the earliest and deepest layers. As a result, in the survey area we know more about the relocated Viking Age farmsteads, which are located away ffom the contemporary fann-mounds, than the earliest structures underlying mounds. Nonetheless, the survey has produced a map of all substantial domestic sites in the region, essentially all of the farmsteads, from the original settlement to the contemporary farms of today. The map includes abandoned and relocated fannsteads and provides a starting point to assess the impact that these more accessible sites have on Icelandic archaeology. We began the SASS project in 2001 with a strong preconception that the Viking Age settlement landscape was different than the medieval and early modem settlement pattem that is more readily apparent in the archaeological and historical records. It seemed unlikely that the farms established by the first settlers would remain in the same place for millennium. Vésteinsson (1998) has suggested that the first settlers might have initially chosen land that was amenable to immediate farming, such as wetter, low-lying grasslands. As lands were cleared, a preference for drier, easier to intensify lands, emerged that would have favored later farms or created an incentive for earlier settlers to relocate their farmsteads to different parts of their property. The devastating impact of settlement and early production practices on the environment is also difficult to reconcile with a high degree of spatial stability in early farmsteads (Amorosi, et al. 1997; Ámalds 1987; Dugmore, et al. 2005; McGovem, et al. 1988; McGovem, et al. 2007; Simpson, et al. 2003; Simpson, 80
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Archaeologia Islandica

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