Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 20

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 20
AGUSTA EDWALD AND KAREN MILEK the only access to the cattle byre was through this narrow corridor from the kitchen. The drain was located up against the thick turf, stone-faced wall that separated the two rooms (the eastem wall of the byre). On the westem side of the drain there was room for three cows. An irregular cut into the floor on the westem side of the drain suggests that some stall stmctures were in place. The byre had two different organic floor deposits which lay on top of a layer of turf, which will have been laid to level and dry out the floor. Two different deposits were excavated from the drain in the cattle byre. The upper fill was dark and organic while the lower one (which could potentially belong to an earlier phase of the room) was rich in peat ash. Peat was one of the main fuels used at the farm and it is possible that ash from the stove in the kitchen was scattered in the drain to dry it out or to extinguish bad odours (Milek 2012). It may also be that a fire was lit in the drain to help dry out the cattle byre, which was often very damp (e.g. see 1920 inspection report, table 2), however, there was no clear indication of an in situ fire in the excavated deposits in the drain. Phase 3 of the structure (Fig 5) is marked by the blocking up of the corridor between the cattle byre and the kitchen and the construction of a new entrance out of the byre to the north. The drain was filled in with soil and stones and the whole room levelled with thin layers of turf. It is likely that the function of this room changed during this phase, as the blocking of the drain makes it unlikely that it was still being used to house cattle. The most likely function of the room during this phase was as a storage room. Phase 2 of the kitchen (Fig 4) is marked by the construction of a heavy basalt stone stove (Fig 6) in the northeast comer of the room. It is likely that before this occupation phase and the construction of the stove the room served a different purpose. According to the inspection records a former baðstofa was tumed into a kitchen in 1868. Three floor deposits were excavated ffom this phase of the kitchen. They were all very compact layers, made up of a mix of organic silt, peat- and wood ash. Two cuts where placed through the floor deposits. The smaller of the cuts was a concave cut which most likely supported a piece of fumiture, while the larger one was packed with stone and may have supported a stmctural post. The later phase of the kitchen, phase 3, is marked by a series of stmctural changes (Fig 5). When the corridor between the kitchen and the cattle byre was blocked another course of stones was added to the northern wall of the kitchen on the westem side of the stove and to the westem side of the stove itself. A series of floor deposits were excavated from this phase, all similar in makeup to the floor deposits in the earlier phase, with varying degrees of wood ash and peat ash inclusions. A cut feature below the stove was excavated in this phase. It was filled with ash and is probably where the embers were stowed away when the stove was not in use. An L-shaped cut was excavated in front of the stove, up against the eastem wall of the kitchen, which probably supported a piece of fumiture such as a box or shelf to keep fuel for the stove. 18
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Archaeologia Islandica

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