Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 38

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 38
SÓLVEIG GUÐMUNDSDÓTTIR BECK goose (or Branta sp.) species (see Hambrecht 2009, 13 and 20-22). Meat preparation, consumption and storage Bird meat, whether it was from land or sea birds, seems to have been mostly processed for personal consumption or to exchange for other necessities (table 1). According to Kristjánsson (1980, 86-87) the people of Skaftafell often traded salted Fulmar and feathers for dulse and people inland sometimes traded tallow, pate, smoked meat or mittens and socks for sea bird feathers for bedding at the end of the 19th/early 20th century (ÞÞ 4450). One exception is the ptarmigan. In the 19th and beginning of the 20th century at least, ptarmigan was usually sold and shipped abroad in the feathers (Kristleifsson 1945, 141; ÞÞ 6307; ÞÞ 6376; ÞÞ 6699). Whether the birds were salted before transport is unclear. It would presumably depend on what salt would do to the feathers as the price depended on how well they looked. The feathers had to be snow white without a speck of blood, so generally ptarmigans that looked bad fetched a lower price or were kept for eating. In 1880, 720 ptarmigans were transported on six horses from Húsafell to Reykjavík (Kristleifsson 1945, 142). According to Guðmundsson (1900, 216-217) in 1896 ptarmigan for 6000 kr. was exported to Denmark, most likely to arrive there before Christmas (Kristleifsson 1945, 142). With a price range example between 15-125 aurar a ptarmigan (ÞÞ 6307; ~70 aurar on average), that could have been at least 8500 birds. That is certainly a high number but as they were exported whole no clear archaeological evidence is likely to be found of such export. At home every useíul part of killed birds was eaten or otherwise utilized. Before salt became common in Iceland after the 18th century, meat was presumably smoked, wind dried or stored in whey when it was not eaten fresh in soup or boiled (írying was rare). Sea birds were either salted or smoked when not eaten fresh and their spines were stored in whey for softening, although cormorant spines usually followed the skin in the cleaning process which was then dried and used for firewood (Anonymous 1936, 186; Jónsson Aðils 1948, 200; Kristjánsson 1986, 236, 241-242 and 270; Friðfmnsson 1991, 48-49; Magnússon 1995, 51; Gísladóttir 1999, 138-147; ÞÞ 6272; ÞÞ 6307; ÞÞ 6376; ÞÞ 7061). Swan necks are known to have been stored in whey as well (ÞÞ 6699). Wings, head and feet were chopped off and when birds were not salted whole the breastbone was removed (only thighs and breasts; Gísladóttir 1999, 142; ÞÞ 6307). When Pufíin chicks were eaten, usually nothing was leít other than leg bones and their wings and heads were often used as kindling (Gísladóttir 1999, 145). In Grímsey where íuel was scarce, wings of gull chicks and whole poor quality Fulmar chicks and bird heads were sometimes stuffed in between poor turf strips in stack piles which through time became a good íuel source called wing turf (vœngjatorf, Norðmann 1946). The crop of the Great auk was so oily it was also sometimes used as kindling (Anonymous 1936, 186). Whether this was done with crops of other
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