Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland

In 2001 the FSĺ / NABO project Landscapes of Settlement in Northern Iceland collected animal bones from a stratified midden deposit associated with the abandoned site Selhagi on the property of the modern farm Haganes. Selhagi is located in the lushly vegetated lakeshore zone and its environmental s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McGovern, Thomas (NABO and CUNY), Perdikaris, Sophia (Human Ecodynamics Research Center CUNY)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: the Digital Archaeological Record
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v=1437275343171
id dataone:doi:10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v-1437275343171
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:doi:10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v-1437275343171 2024-06-03T18:46:57+00:00 Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland McGovern, Thomas (NABO and CUNY) Perdikaris, Sophia (Human Ecodynamics Research Center CUNY) Iceland ENVELOPE(-17.158241,-17.018166,65.6104,65.561584) 2015-07-19T03:09:03.171Z https://doi.org/10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v=1437275343171 unknown the Digital Archaeological Record Norse Data Recovery / Excavation Selhagi Fauna Dataset dataone:urn:node:TDAR https://doi.org/10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v=1437275343171 2024-06-03T18:07:30Z In 2001 the FSĺ / NABO project Landscapes of Settlement in Northern Iceland collected animal bones from a stratified midden deposit associated with the abandoned site Selhagi on the property of the modern farm Haganes. Selhagi is located in the lushly vegetated lakeshore zone and its environmental setting presents a strong contrast with the eroded uplands to the S of the lake where the early sites at Sveigakot and Hrísheimur are under excavation. Close to both major migratory waterfowl nesting areas and some of the best trout fishing in Iceland, the site would appear to be optimally located for exploitation of wild species. The Selhagi site had produced well preserved animal bone during small scale avocational excavations in the 1970’s and the major objective of the 2001 FSĺ /NABO investigations was to map the site and locate possible midden deposits for further work. The fully turf covered site appears to be a small multi-roomed structure with clearly defined room depressions and an apparent mound of midden material to the NW of the structure complex. Coring within the structure indicated that it was abandoned some time before the widespread AD 1477 ash fall and show the presence of the 1104 and 1158 tephras as well. The midden team carried out a small-scale (2 x 2 m) stratigraphic test excavation which found well preserved animal bone in clearly stratified midden deposits that were definitely capped by the AD 1477 ash fall and probably also by a thinner 1300 tephra. At base, the midden deposits directly overly the local variant of the “Landnám” tephra of c. AD 871. Two AMS radiocarbon dates on cattle bone from the same context in the upper midden produce a closely consistent one sigma range from late 11th to mid 12th century. It would appear that Selhagi has a long occupational history extending from settlement times probably extending to the later 12th to early 13th century. A preliminary analysis of the animal bones recovered indicate the normal range of domesticates (cattle, sheep, goat, pig), substantial amounts of freshwater fish (trout and charr), and a few migratory birds (duck and swan) as well as bird egg shell. More surprising is the presence of marine fish (cod family) and sea birds (Guillemot/Murre and Razorbill). Despite the lakeshore setting, the Selhagi archaeofauna thus far does not indicate any intensive exploitation of adult migratory waterfowl. This small initial sample does indicate that the site participated in a social and economic network that provided regular access to distant marine resources. While larger samples are needed to better understand possible trends through time, the present sample shows an apparent reduction in cattle relative to caprines (sheep & goat) from lower layers to upper that parallels a general reduction in domesticates relative to wild species. Further investigations at this promising site are needed to better document these apparent trends and better understand the economic changes at Selhagi during its period of occupation. Dataset Iceland Mývatn Razorbill the Digital Archaeological Record (via DataONE) Mývatn ENVELOPE(-16.985,-16.985,65.600,65.600) Selhagi ENVELOPE(-21.282,-21.282,64.756,64.756) ENVELOPE(-17.158241,-17.018166,65.6104,65.561584)
institution Open Polar
collection the Digital Archaeological Record (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:TDAR
language unknown
topic Norse
Data Recovery / Excavation
Selhagi
Fauna
spellingShingle Norse
Data Recovery / Excavation
Selhagi
Fauna
McGovern, Thomas (NABO and CUNY)
Perdikaris, Sophia (Human Ecodynamics Research Center CUNY)
Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland
topic_facet Norse
Data Recovery / Excavation
Selhagi
Fauna
description In 2001 the FSĺ / NABO project Landscapes of Settlement in Northern Iceland collected animal bones from a stratified midden deposit associated with the abandoned site Selhagi on the property of the modern farm Haganes. Selhagi is located in the lushly vegetated lakeshore zone and its environmental setting presents a strong contrast with the eroded uplands to the S of the lake where the early sites at Sveigakot and Hrísheimur are under excavation. Close to both major migratory waterfowl nesting areas and some of the best trout fishing in Iceland, the site would appear to be optimally located for exploitation of wild species. The Selhagi site had produced well preserved animal bone during small scale avocational excavations in the 1970’s and the major objective of the 2001 FSĺ /NABO investigations was to map the site and locate possible midden deposits for further work. The fully turf covered site appears to be a small multi-roomed structure with clearly defined room depressions and an apparent mound of midden material to the NW of the structure complex. Coring within the structure indicated that it was abandoned some time before the widespread AD 1477 ash fall and show the presence of the 1104 and 1158 tephras as well. The midden team carried out a small-scale (2 x 2 m) stratigraphic test excavation which found well preserved animal bone in clearly stratified midden deposits that were definitely capped by the AD 1477 ash fall and probably also by a thinner 1300 tephra. At base, the midden deposits directly overly the local variant of the “Landnám” tephra of c. AD 871. Two AMS radiocarbon dates on cattle bone from the same context in the upper midden produce a closely consistent one sigma range from late 11th to mid 12th century. It would appear that Selhagi has a long occupational history extending from settlement times probably extending to the later 12th to early 13th century. A preliminary analysis of the animal bones recovered indicate the normal range of domesticates (cattle, sheep, goat, pig), substantial amounts of freshwater fish (trout and charr), and a few migratory birds (duck and swan) as well as bird egg shell. More surprising is the presence of marine fish (cod family) and sea birds (Guillemot/Murre and Razorbill). Despite the lakeshore setting, the Selhagi archaeofauna thus far does not indicate any intensive exploitation of adult migratory waterfowl. This small initial sample does indicate that the site participated in a social and economic network that provided regular access to distant marine resources. While larger samples are needed to better understand possible trends through time, the present sample shows an apparent reduction in cattle relative to caprines (sheep & goat) from lower layers to upper that parallels a general reduction in domesticates relative to wild species. Further investigations at this promising site are needed to better document these apparent trends and better understand the economic changes at Selhagi during its period of occupation.
format Dataset
author McGovern, Thomas (NABO and CUNY)
Perdikaris, Sophia (Human Ecodynamics Research Center CUNY)
author_facet McGovern, Thomas (NABO and CUNY)
Perdikaris, Sophia (Human Ecodynamics Research Center CUNY)
author_sort McGovern, Thomas (NABO and CUNY)
title Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland
title_short Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland
title_full Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland
title_fullStr Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Report of Animal Bones from Selhagi, Mývatn District, Northern Iceland
title_sort report of animal bones from selhagi, mývatn district, northern iceland
publisher the Digital Archaeological Record
publishDate
url https://doi.org/10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v=1437275343171
op_coverage Iceland
ENVELOPE(-17.158241,-17.018166,65.6104,65.561584)
long_lat ENVELOPE(-16.985,-16.985,65.600,65.600)
ENVELOPE(-21.282,-21.282,64.756,64.756)
ENVELOPE(-17.158241,-17.018166,65.6104,65.561584)
geographic Mývatn
Selhagi
geographic_facet Mývatn
Selhagi
genre Iceland
Mývatn
Razorbill
genre_facet Iceland
Mývatn
Razorbill
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6067:XCV8KS6SVJ_meta$v=1437275343171
_version_ 1800873658122502144