Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 41

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 41
EXPLOITATION OF WILD BIRDS IN ICELAND FROM THE SETTLEMENT PERIOD TO THE 19TH CENTURY AND ITS REFLECTION IN ARCHAEOLOGY and that supposedly got rid of the smell (Theodórsson 1936, 236-238; Jónasson 1945, 9-10; Kristjánsson 1986, 218-222 and 237; Friðfmnsson 1991, 48-49 and 121; ÞÞ 4450; ÞÞ 4676; ÞÞ 4425; ÞÞ 4470; ÞÞ 4512; ÞÞ 6330; ÞÞ 7203; ÞÞ 6559; ÞÞ 8011). The Great auk was rid of his feathers by boiling its body in water, which loosened the feathers from the skin and presumably cleaned them at the same time (Anonymous 1936,186). Only swans seem to have been skinned (Jónasson 1945, 196; Ólafsson and Pálsson 1981, 128; JÁMXIII, 26-27). In 1963 Sveinsson (KB 1963, 729) tells of 85 swans that ífoze to death on a lake around 1900 and he comments on how very little fat had been on their skins. That could suggest that swanskins usually had to be scraped similar to animal skins in order to get rid of fat. No information was found regarding how swanskins were treated before being sold but according to Roth and Merz (eds. 1997, 364) feathered skins were preserved by drying and/or some fonn of chemical treatment. When Olavius (1965, 116) toured around Iceland in the 1770s swanskins were often chopped up and used for bedding. For a long time (mid 14th-20th century) a large variety of feathers and down were used in Britain and Europe e.g. to make fashion accessories like hat trimmings, boas, fans, pelerines and muffs (Cumming et al. 2010, 23 and 80) as well as being used to produce tooth picks, in fly fishing (e.g. 17th c. England), in golf balls (featheries, goose feather cores in cowhide spheres), powder puffs and parasols (Hanson 2011, 213-246). Skins of birds like swans, ostriches, cranes and vultures were often used to trim garments in place of furs (14th-mid 17th c.) and mallard feathers were e.g. used in wigs (ca. 1750-1800; Cumming et al. 2010, 23 and 80; Hanson 2011, 244-245). As swanskins were a luxury commodity, it is not unlikely that white ptarmigan skins were also used for these purposes as a cheaper altemative, although no written confirmation was found of this. In the oldest known records from 1624, at least 116 kg of unidentified bird feathers and down were exported in that year and in 1630 at least 624 kg of the same vaguely classified products were exported (Jónsson and Magnússon eds. 1997, 416-429). How much of that was eiderdown, and how much was other feather types, is unclear. Swanskins don't seem to have been recorded as an export commodity until 1806 (Jónsson and Magnússon eds. 1997,416-429), although they could have been counted in the vaguely defmed “bird feathers and down” category, which is recorded as far back as 1624. As feathers and skins seem to have been a desired commodity from the 14th century it is not impossible that export of such items from Iceland goes back farther than the beginning of the 17th century as records indicate. During and after moulting all flight and tail feathers of geese and swans were collected, e.g. in Gilsfjörður and on Amarvatns- and Holtavörðuheiði where swans moulted and in Mýrar where wild geese shed their feathers (Theodórsson 1936, 236-238; Ólafsson and Pálsson 1981, 128 and 321). Their primary flight feathers, as well as raven flight feathers, were highly sought affer for use as quills 39
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Archaeologia Islandica

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