Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 33

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 33
EXPLOITATION OF WILD BIRDS IN ICELAND FROM THE SETTLEMENT PERIOD TO THE 19TH CENTURY AND ITS REFLECTION IN ARCHAEOLOGY when slipping the snares around the birds necks (Jónasson 1945, 194; Guðmundsson ed. 1949, 46-47; see also e.g. ÞÞ 362; ÞÞ 363; ÞÞ 523; ÞÞ 742; ÞÞ 6243; ÞÞ 6291; ÞÞ 6296; ÞÞ 6388; ÞÞ 7203), although records also mentioned snares made of willow reed and baleen bristles (Norðmann 1946,27; Kristjánsson 1986,182-183; ÞÞ 6330). Only two vague descriptions were found of bird nets. They were said to have had fine mesh size and been around 5x2 m in size but what they were made of is unclear (ÞÞ 742; ÞÞ 6296). Most likely they were made of similar materials as the rope or perhaps fine leather. The bird archaeofauna uncovered by McGovem et al. (2006, 193 and 2007,43) in the inland Mývatn district at Hofstaðir, Selhagi, Hrísheimar and Sveigakot (9th-13th century contexts) was largely dominated by ptarmigan bones as well as in Skriðuklaustur monastery (late 15th to middle 16th century) in Fljótsdalur (Hamilton-Dyer 2010, 4), but such bones have also been found at the coastal site of Bessastaðir (time period unclear) in Álftanes and in Aðalstræti 10 (late 17th-early 18th century) in Reykjavík (Hambrecht 2009, 11-13, 20-22; table 2) but in much smaller numbers. In most descriptions found of early bird hunting, snares seem to have been made of horsehair but with different arrangements of controlling devices. When hunting sea birds nesting on cliffs, the snare was usually at the end of a long staff, which also had a metal hook on the other end. Special snare rafts were used e.g. in Dyrhólaey and in the Westman Islands. Anything caught on private land belonged to the landowner, but birds hunted on the ocean around it were anyone’s game. To take advantage of this, thin wooden boards were roped together. Many small holes were bored into the planks and the snares were threaded through. The rafts would float just under the surface and a live-feathered captive lured the birds to stand on them. The only sea bird that was not snared was the Puffin (Fratercula arctica), as it nests in holes rather than on rocky ledges. Puffins (and sometimes Tystie chicks (Cepphus grylléj) were either hooked in their holes with an iron hook on the end of a wooden staff or netted when they tried to leave their nest. Netting the Puffin is only known in Drangey in the early 18th century but by the middle 19th century it had spread to many Puffin colonies all over Iceland. This lead to overhunting and in 1869 netting Puffins was banned. Dogs were also sometimes used to dig into Puffin holes to catch the chicks (Jónasson 1945, 198-199; Ólafsson and Pálsson 1981, 326-329; Kristjánsson 1986, 182-186 and 200-205; Pálsson 1999,6; ÞÞ 6307). In 1875 a pole-net was brought to the Westman Islands from the Faroes and it is still used today (Kristjánsson 1986, 205). In the 18th and 19th centuries the chicks of Fulmars, Northem gannets, gulls and cormorants were simply clubbed to death during the nesting season with a wooden club about 50 cm long, often with an iron or copper cylinder to protect the broad end of the stick from wear or a short and thin iron shaft sticking out at 90° angle. On the other end there was a thin rope or leather strap through a hole that was fastened to the wrist. Adult gannets were also clubbed on spring nights while 31
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Archaeologia Islandica

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