Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 91

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 91
FARMSTEAD RELOCATION AT THE END OF THE VIKING AGE. RESULTS OF THE SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SETTLEMENT SURVEY Viking Age household church. Like the domestic buildings of the farmstead, the church and cemetery are under the Hekla 1104 tephra, which covers the entire area. The earliest traces of the relocated fanustead lie at the bottom of a substantial farm-mound at Upper Seyla that was occupied until 1959 when the farmstead moved to its current location near the main road. Few elements of the early medieval farmstead are visible on the surface. A cut associated with a small canal has exposed a long section of the farmstead on the westem and northem sides and coring has been used to trace the extent of the earliest phases of the post AD 1100 farmstead. Two test pits in the upper farmstead did present evidence of a very small (i.e., 1 cm) layer of midden below the Hekla 1104 tephra layer. However, the depth of the farm-mound and modem debris íforn the upper farmstead make it diffícult to systematically core to the earliest phases of the mound. Perhaps the most significant feature tying the two farmsteads together is the relocation of the household churchyard from Lower Seyla to the new Upper Seyla farmstead, in approximately the same relative location and covering the same size as the Viking Age churchyard associated with the Lower Seyla site. Test excavations in the upper churchyard confinned its use as a cemetery between the Hekla 1104 and Hekla 1300 tephras (Zoéga and Sigurðarson 2010). Glaumbœr Compared with Lower Seyla, the Viking Age farmstead at Lower Glaumbær was relatively short-lived and appears to have only one major sfructural phase. It consists of a longhouse with multiple rooms approximately 40 meters in total length. Attached to the traditionally shaped skáli are an ancillary room to the west, and another ancillary room, possibly a pantry or kitchen, connecting to another room at the southem end of the complex (figure 3). A 2009 excavation of the midden to the east of the longhouse revealed a small semi-subterranean structure at its base. There may be a detached bam to the east, but the dating is currently uncertain and it may be a later stmcture belonging to the medieval farm. There is limited information on the occupational history of the longhouse at Lower Glaumbær. Large, open-area excavations conducted at the site in 2005 to ground-truth geophysical interpretations primarily exposed wall tops. Limited test trenches from 2001 and 2002 left floor layers largely intact so it is difficult to judge the amount of accumulation in the building although a difference in the style of turf constmction that is seen in the southem half of the longhouse suggests a possible remodeling or extension to the south of the skáli (Bolender 2007a). The midden has approximately 80 centimeters of ash, bone, and turf debris between the Vj~1000 and Hekla 1104 tephra layers (Shepard, et al. 2010). There is no evidence of a domestic occupation at the site post-dating the Hekla 1104 tephra. A small test excavation in the midden associated with the later Upper Glumbaer fannstead (the current turf house museum at Byggðasafn Skagfirðinga) shows that refuse began to accumulate there imnediately above the Hekla 1104 tephra. 89
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Archaeologia Islandica

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