A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226

Since the 1960’s pollen studies have shown that Hordeum-type pollen was grown in south west Iceland in medieval times. More recently it has been inferred that cultivation in the medieval period may have been exclusive to high status farming estates e.g. Hrísbrú in Mosfellsdalur. This raises the ques...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Riddell, Scott J., 1967-
Other Authors: Háskóli Íslands
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/17703
id ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/17703
record_format openpolar
spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/17703 2023-05-15T16:50:43+02:00 A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226 Riddell, Scott J., 1967- Háskóli Íslands 2014-05 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/17703 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/17703 Fornleifafræði Landnýting Miðaldir Mosfellsdalur Thesis Master's 2014 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:59:06Z Since the 1960’s pollen studies have shown that Hordeum-type pollen was grown in south west Iceland in medieval times. More recently it has been inferred that cultivation in the medieval period may have been exclusive to high status farming estates e.g. Hrísbrú in Mosfellsdalur. This raises the question of whether or not cereals were cultivated on smaller farm holdings. This study sought to address this question by comparing existing pollen data from Hrísbrú, Mosfell and Leirvogstunga with new pollen data from Helgadalur and Skeggjastaðir. All are located within Mosfellsdalur and all have archaeological remains dated to c. AD 871-1226. Standard pollen counting and rapid scanning methods were applied and the chronological framework was constructed around a suite of tephra layers of known origin and date. Vegetation histories were reconstructed for Helgadalur and Skeggjastaðir that reveal the character of the environment before and after AD 871+/-2 (Landnám). Evidence was found of human activity at Skeggjastaðir immediately prior to the conventional date of settlement. Evidence also suggests a change in land use in Mosfellsdalur during the mid-12th century. More importantly, no Hordeum-type pollen was identified at either Helgadalur or Skeggjastaðir and it is concluded that cereal cultivation was the preserve of Hrísbrú (and probably Mosfell) c. AD 871-1226. Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland) Helgadalur ENVELOPE(-21.582,-21.582,64.163,64.163) Leirvogstunga ENVELOPE(-21.688,-21.688,64.178,64.178) Skeggjastaðir ENVELOPE(-16.417,-16.417,66.117,66.117)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Fornleifafræði
Landnýting
Miðaldir
Mosfellsdalur
spellingShingle Fornleifafræði
Landnýting
Miðaldir
Mosfellsdalur
Riddell, Scott J., 1967-
A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226
topic_facet Fornleifafræði
Landnýting
Miðaldir
Mosfellsdalur
description Since the 1960’s pollen studies have shown that Hordeum-type pollen was grown in south west Iceland in medieval times. More recently it has been inferred that cultivation in the medieval period may have been exclusive to high status farming estates e.g. Hrísbrú in Mosfellsdalur. This raises the question of whether or not cereals were cultivated on smaller farm holdings. This study sought to address this question by comparing existing pollen data from Hrísbrú, Mosfell and Leirvogstunga with new pollen data from Helgadalur and Skeggjastaðir. All are located within Mosfellsdalur and all have archaeological remains dated to c. AD 871-1226. Standard pollen counting and rapid scanning methods were applied and the chronological framework was constructed around a suite of tephra layers of known origin and date. Vegetation histories were reconstructed for Helgadalur and Skeggjastaðir that reveal the character of the environment before and after AD 871+/-2 (Landnám). Evidence was found of human activity at Skeggjastaðir immediately prior to the conventional date of settlement. Evidence also suggests a change in land use in Mosfellsdalur during the mid-12th century. More importantly, no Hordeum-type pollen was identified at either Helgadalur or Skeggjastaðir and it is concluded that cereal cultivation was the preserve of Hrísbrú (and probably Mosfell) c. AD 871-1226.
author2 Háskóli Íslands
format Thesis
author Riddell, Scott J., 1967-
author_facet Riddell, Scott J., 1967-
author_sort Riddell, Scott J., 1967-
title A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226
title_short A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226
title_full A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226
title_fullStr A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226
title_full_unstemmed A Palynological Study of Land Use in Medieval Mosfellsdalur, Pre-Landnám-AD1226
title_sort palynological study of land use in medieval mosfellsdalur, pre-landnám-ad1226
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/17703
long_lat ENVELOPE(-21.582,-21.582,64.163,64.163)
ENVELOPE(-21.688,-21.688,64.178,64.178)
ENVELOPE(-16.417,-16.417,66.117,66.117)
geographic Helgadalur
Leirvogstunga
Skeggjastaðir
geographic_facet Helgadalur
Leirvogstunga
Skeggjastaðir
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/17703
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