Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 76

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 76
GUÐRÚN ALDA GÍSLADÓTTIR, JAMES M. WOOLLETT, UGGI ÆVARSSON, CÉLINE DUPONT-HÉBERT, ANTHONY NEWTON AND ORRI VÉSTEINSSON the 13th to 15th centuries, cattle diminished greatly in relative importance, and herding seems to have been reorganised around a much more specialised sheep herding strategy. Later assemblages now attributed to the 15th century to the 18th century showed an abrupt and manifold increase in the exploitation of marine resources notably fish and seals. The latter taxonomic group actually represented the majority of mammal specimens during the later phases (Amorosi 1992, 125). The shifts in economic emphasis demonstrated in these assemblages have been interpreted as evidence of the impacts of, and adjustments to, episodes of climate cooling during the 13th and 17th/18th centuries. Since 1988, North Atlantic archaeology has benefited írom ongoing developments in palaeoclimatology, palaeoenvironmental studies, tephrochronological dating and new fieldwork methodologies and a great number of new survey and site-oriented field projects which have brought new, data-rich regional perspectives on landscape change, subsistence and social movements. While North Iceland has seen particular emphasis in these new projects, the bulk of this work has been carried out in South-Þingeyjarsýsla (around Mývatn area), Eyjafjörður and in the Westfjords regions. The northeastem-most extremities of Iceland, Þistilfjörður, Öxarfjörður and Melrakkaslétta, have seen little ongoing archaeological research since the IPP project and Svalbarð remained until 2011 the sole major site investigated in the region with significant faunal and substantial artifact collections. In order to refine and supplement the chronology of this site of critical importance, the Svalbarð midden was re-examined in 2008 as part of the program of the Island Connections: Integrative Multi-scalar Historical Ecology in Faroes, Iceland, and Greenland project, funded by the National Science Foundation Intemational initiative, and as part of the Comparative study of marine mammals in the subsistence economies of the Labrador Inuit and of Iceland during the Little Ice Age project, funded by the Fonds Québécois de la Recherche sur la Société et la Culture (FQRSC) In 2008, the midden’s stratigraphy was re-evaluated and the midden was re-sampled for geoarchaeological, geochemical and archaeoentomological analyses. Three tephras were noted in the midden in 1988 and in the 2008 re-examination. These included a thick layer of light coloured tephra in a sterile compact organic silt overlying poorly sorted fluvial deposits, and two thin and closely-spaced tephras in the middle of the midden section, the lower tephra being pale green-grey in colour and the upper darker grey. On the basis of visual inspection and initial geochemistry, these were initially and preliminarily identified as the Hekla ashfall of circa 3000 BP, and the Hekla 1636 and Vatnajökull 1717 tephras (Amorosi 1992: 115). These tentative attributions provided isochrones useful for subdividing the midden’s stratigraphy into clear Medieval and Post-Medieval phases, and to clearly differentiate deposits representing the 17th and 18th centuries. As well, these dates permitted the comparison of the midden’s 74
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