Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 99

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 99
THE SVALBARÐ PROJECT of occupation earlier than 1477 and possibly earlier than 1300 as well. The effect of þúfur on the meadow mound and wall prvide an indirect indication that the site predates conspicuous local cooling; in the Svalbard midden frost wedge features cut into the VI477 tephra, indicating that cryoturbation processes in the region may have been most active after 1477. Because of its apparent age and the complexity of its features, this humble site needs further investigations and probably holds much more interest than one would expect, as did Þorvaldsstaðasel, a similarly humble site. A viking age burial or a sheep herder's pastime, that is the question fn the summer of 2010, two strange stone features were spotted on the way to Bægistaðir. They are located on a high terrace just north of the farm site. From the terrace, the view is splendid; it overlooks Bægistaðir and the Sandá valley to the south and, to the east and north, a huge, fine wet meadow lay before the eyes. This wet meadow has a complex irrigation or drainage system and was used for both hay cutting and peat extraction. One of the structures on the terrace can be described as a sub- rectangular stone paving of flat stones measuring 1,7 m x 0, 7 m by the base. The other is a raised and domed rounded stone structure about 2 m in diameter. A 1 m wide trench was dug through the flat sub-rectangular structure and, as the exposed “paving” stones were lifted, early 20th century ceramic and glass sherds came to light. When the stones Figure 18. A sheep herder past-time. were lifted on the second structure, absolutely nothing except silt was found, with no visible cut or fill. Simpler and much smaller “pavement” and “caim” stmctures were also observed in other exposed terrace areas around Bægistaðir in 2011. With nothing more definitive to work with, we propose that the pavement stmcture is the work of children diverting themselves whilst looking after sheep. The other feature might well be a collapsed caim. It is often said that when archaeologists don’t understand something they say it must be ritual but for Icelandic archaeologists the refrain is more likely to be 'this must be sheep-herder’s work'. Borg 97
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Archaeologia Islandica

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