Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 108

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 108
HOWELL M. ROBERTS AND ELÍN ÓSK HREIÐARSDÓTTIR wholly unpromising as the basis for further study. Today we have a different view. Litlu-Núpar and its wider context Litlu-Núpar is located on a grassy slope of Hvammsheiði heath, on the eastem bank of the River Laxá in Suður-Þingeyjarsýsla. Research in the area has mostly focused on the pre-Christian burials at the edge of the homefield but a field survey and limited trial trenching within the homefield and beyond have begun to reveal a settlement pattem that might be largely contemporary to the burials. At Litlu-Núpar three big enclosures and fourteen mins can be found within the home field which is marked by a double and in parts triple, turf boundary (Fig.l). The heathen burials discussed in this article were found alongside side of outermost boundary where some erosion has occurred but most of the home field is overgrown with heather. The mins and boundaries at Litlu-Núpar are sunken and intergrated with the landscape with the exception of a turf- and stone built sheep house from the 19th century, which stands much higher than the other mins, in the south eastem comer of the home field. The other remains are scattered across the home field and could well be from the same and much earlier occupational phases of the site. Most of the stmctural rains at Litlu-Núpar are simple, that is they consist of a single compartment or are divided up in two. There are only two exceptions to this which are two ruins close together, situated on small hills around the middle of the innermost boundary. Both of these mins have several compartments and it is not unlikely that one of them could be the original farm in the area. Another possible location of the farm might be undemeath the mins of the 19th century sheep house where a small hill has accumulated and gives an indication of a substantial occupation history. Trial trenching was conducted through three of the mins (marked A, B and C on figure 1) in the home field in connection to the excavation of the burials in 2006. The trenches showed that all three mins were likely outhouses. Ruins A and B only seem to have had a single occupational phase and were out of use by the 13th century, possibly long before. Ruin C was used for a longer period, sometime between 940 and 1300 AD and might have been a bam. It is likely that most of the mins within the home field of Litlu-Núpar were outhouses of some sort (Friðriksson et al. 2007, 5-7). The multiple boundaries and large enclosures in Litlu-Núpar are of some interest. Such boundaries in seem to be fairly common in abandoned farms in Þingeyjarsýsla county but have not been found to any similar extent else were in Iceland (see for example Lámsdóttir and Hreiðarsdóttir. 2011, 135). Little is known about the role of these multiple boundaries although it is most likely that they served some function relating to cultivation (e.g. crops). Two of the enclosures at Litlu-Núpar were trenched in 2008-2009 (marked D and E on figure 1). The trenches revealed that one of the enclosures, D, was clearly built before 106
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