Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 39

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 39
EXPLOITATION OF WILD BIRDS IN ICELAND FROM THE SETTLEMENT PERIOD TO THE 19TH CENTURY AND ITS REFLECTION IN ARCHAEOLOGY seabirds as well is unclear but the fat of the gannet for example was ofien used for ointments or in oil lamps and Fulmar spew which was squeezed from the chicks bellies was also used as a light source (Kristjánsson 1986,225-226 and 241-242; Norðmann 1946, 29-30). Wings of auks were sometimes dried and plucked, and the feathers used for bedding, while the bones were thrown away (ÞÞ 7203; ÞÞ 8011). Generally all meat was picked off birds, the neck and head picked out, even the eyes and the brain (Friðfmnsson 1991, 48-49; Gísladóttir 1999, 147). Leg and wing bones of swans and geese were used as drinking straws for children and swan feet skins were dried whole, fitted with a lock and used as purses (Jónasson 1945, 196; Óla 1976, 91; Ólafsson and Pálsson 1981,128; Tómasson 1988, 95). Wings of larger birds were used to sweep floors and for dusting and bird feet were usually coveted children’s toys (Einarsson 1946, 108; Gísladóttir 1999, 146; Milek 2006, 73; ÞÞ 6307) although eagle claws were kept around to ward off house fires (Tómasson 1988, 95). Bone remains Judging from the information presented above the most likely bones to be found in archaeological excavations in Iceland would be lower leg (e.g. tarsometatarsus and digits) and wing (e.g. metacarpals and digits) bones as well as skull bones (mandible, cranium), where such things were not used as fuel (table 1). Where birds were eaten ffesh (and/or possibly smoked and wind dried) most of the other bones are also likely to appear in excavations, especially ffom larger birds like geese and swans. It is unclear, however, whether the stemum for example, was cut away from the meat when it was smoked or wind dried like it was sometimes done when salted. If birds were stored whole in whey, bones like the humerus, femur, ilium, ribs, wishbone, coracoids and stemum were most likely eaten along with the meat. The amount of bones eaten ffom fresh younger chicks could also have depended in some degree on the ossification stage, i.e. how much bone was still partially cartilage (Podulka et al. 2004, 4.6). Birds hunted in large quantities while moulting (geese and swans) or nesting (sea birds) most likely had to be stored over long periods of time so perhaps they are more likely to have been stored in whey, dried or smoked, while birds like the ptarmigan, which was hunted in snares most likely in much smaller quantities at a time (opportunistic hunting, see Tinsley 1999, 74-75), could have been eaten fairly ffesh and whole more often than not. Bone collections do not seem to show any clear trend towards one way over the other however, although judging from the information at hand, wing and long bones do seem to be more common. According to McGovem et al. (2006, 193), the unidentified bone assemblages in the Mývatn district were largely long bone shaft fragments. In Hrisheimar (McGovem and Perdikaris 2002, 9) and Sveigakot (Tinsley 2001, 30-31) ptarmigan remains represented whole individuals (wings, legs, stema, and cranial), while the Hofstaðir (Tinsley 1999, 74-75) ptarmigan collections were largely lower leg bones, which Tinsley 37
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Archaeologia Islandica

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