Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2015, Side 71

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2015, Side 71
Harp Seals in the Icelandic Archaeofauna: Sea Ice and Hard Times increase in the presence of harp seal bone in the archaeological record in the 14th cen- tury intimates a significant alteration to the bio-geography of the harp seal at this time. This may be linked either to a change in capelin migratory habits and a genuine shift in climate or, a population increase in the Greenland Sea, perhaps linked to the NAO (Haug et al. 1996; Hauksson & Bogason 1997; Folkow et al. 2004: Rose 2005; Johnston et al. 2012). Acknowledgments I’d like to thank Sandra Granquist (Icelan- dic Seal Centre, Hvammstangi) and Erling- ur Hauksson (Marine Research Centre of Breiðafjörður, Ólafsvík) for helpful advice on the ecology and the distribution of harp seals in Iceland. Similarly, thanks to the par- ticipants of the Human Seal Interrelations Workshop, University of Stockholm, No- vember 2014, for further useful insights into seal and human relations across northern Europe; in particular Konrad Smiarowski (City University of New York) for the up-to- date information on the Svalbarð excava- tion. I’d also like to thank Glóey Finnsdóttir and Guðrún Þráinsdóttir for help with the translation of Icelandic sources. Thanks also go to the anonymous reviewers and the editor for taking the time to provide both positive encouragement and constructive feedback on this paper. The responsibility for any erroneous interpretation of data or sources lies exclusively with me. References Amorosi, Thomas 1989, ‘Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland: Some preliminary notes’ The Anthropology of Iceland, E.P. Durrenberger & Gísli Páls- son eds. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 203-27. Amorosi, Thomas 1990, ‘Icelandic archaeo- fauna: A preliminary review’ Acta Ar- chaeologia 61, 272-84. Amorosi, Thomas 1992, ‘Climate impact and human response in Northeast Ice- land: Archaeological investigations at Svalbarð, 1986-1988.’ Norse and Later Settlement and Subsistence in the North Atlantic, C.D. Morris & D.J. Rackham eds. Glasgow: University of Glasgow, 103-38. Amorosi, Thomas 1996, Icelandic Zooar- chaeology, PhD thesis, City University ofNew York. Amundsen, Colin, S. Perdikaris, T.H. McGovern, Y. Krivogorskaya, M. Brown, K. Smiarowski, S. Storm, S. Modugno, M. Frik, & M. Koczela 2005, ‘Fishing booths and fishing strategies in Medieval Iceland: An archaeofauna from Akurvík, North-West Iceland.’ En- vironmental Archaeology 10, 127-42. Benediktsson, Jakob ed. 1952, Arngrimi Jonae opera latine conscripta, Hafniæ: Munksgaard. Byock, Jesse 2001, Viking Age Iceland, London: Penguin. 69

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