Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 57

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 57
PROBLEMS AND POSSIBILITIES WHEN USING BEETLE REMAINS (COLEOPTERA) FOR INTERPRETATION OF POST-MEDIEVAL SETTLEMENTS IN THE INTERDISCIPLINARY HÓLAR PROJECT, ICELAND the possibility of investigating the function and interior environment of the buildings (Buckland et. al., 1995). Previous projects involving the study of insect remains in house floor samples in the North Atlantic region have examined particular issues such as high-status settlements in Iceland (e.g. Amorosi et.al., 1992) and Norse settlements in Greenland (e.g. Buckland et.al., 1983). These projects generally reveal good preservation in their samples, with remnants of both plant and insect remains. In several cases the insect fauna has been diverse, being dominated by beetles (Coleoptera) and puparia of true flies (Diptera). It is, however, important to remember that the study of settlements from house floors presents a complex taphonomic situation: remains may represent any or all of the indoor environment and reflect the functions of different rooms; or may be “background fauna” from the surrounding environment and activities; or be generated from incoming products and materials from outside the settlement. It is also important to consider the various activities that may be reflected in the samples collected such as the construction of and repairs to a house, indoor activities, change in activities over time, and different daily activities, such as cleaning. This variety should be taken into consideration during the interpretation of floor samples and may be compared with that from other constructions like wells that are often found and routinely sampled during excavations in for example Sweden. Wells may function as traps for insects in particular, and samples of the relevant layer during its use provide infonnation about the influx of material from a broad range of environments and activities around the site. Another common feature found in archaeological excavations that is also routinely studied in Iceland is the farm midden, which has been sampled and investigated in Hólar. This kind of feature has been routinely investigated in Iceland and well described in previous publications (e.g. Zutter, 1989, 1997, for examples of palaeoecological analysis of midden material). Knowledge about houses in Iceland including how they were built and the distribution of the rooms and activities in them was developed early, during excavations of famous sites such as Stöng (Roussell, 1943) and Stóraborg (e.g. Sveinbjamadóttir et.al., 1981; Snæsdóttir, 1989; Buckland & Perry, 1989). The Stöng site is of particular interest because it was reconstructed between the years 1969 and 1977 (Áugústsson, 1983). This is one of several reconsfructions of earlier buildings in Iceland dating from the 19th century back to the Viking age. Although there is active discussion about the historical reliability of such reconstructions, and how to protect the buildings preserved within them, they all provide very useful insights about the indoor environment of houses when interpreting results from analyses of samples from excavated former buildings. The use of insect analysis (palaeoentomology) in geological and archaeological investigations has developed much during the last 50 years, and, as the number of studies has 55
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