Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.

This paper focuses on the occupation and landscape history of Dalur and Mörk, two areas of long-term settlement in the Eyjafjallahreppur district of southern Iceland. The aim is to illustrate the importance of evaluating not only farm occupation and abandonment, but also to assess the complexities o...

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Main Authors: Mairs, K-A., Church, M. J., Dugmore, A. J., Sveinbjarnardóttir, G.
Other Authors: Arneborg, J, Grønnow, B
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Aarhus University Press 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/
http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/1/5242.pdf
http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/List.aspx?l=c&id=10097
id ftunivdurham:oai:dro.dur.ac.uk.OAI2:5242
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spelling ftunivdurham:oai:dro.dur.ac.uk.OAI2:5242 2023-05-15T14:26:50+02:00 Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland. Mairs, K-A. Church, M. J. Dugmore, A. J. Sveinbjarnardóttir, G. Arneborg, J Grønnow, B 2006-06-01 application/pdf http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/ http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/1/5242.pdf http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/List.aspx?l=c&id=10097 unknown Aarhus University Press dro:5242 http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/ http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/List.aspx?l=c&id=10097 http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/1/5242.pdf Arneborg, J & Grønnow, B (Eds.). (2006). Dynamics of northern societies : proceedings of the SILA/NABO Conference on Arctic and North Atlantic Archaeology, Copenhagen, May 10th-14th, 2004. Copenhagen: Aarhus University Press, pp. 365-373, PNM studies in archaeology & history(10) Settlement and abandonment Woodland clearance Soil erosion Iceland Norse Book chapter PeerReviewed 2006 ftunivdurham 2020-05-28T22:27:10Z This paper focuses on the occupation and landscape history of Dalur and Mörk, two areas of long-term settlement in the Eyjafjallahreppur district of southern Iceland. The aim is to illustrate the importance of evaluating not only farm occupation and abandonment, but also to assess the complexities of the environmental interactions of long-term settlements. Environmental records are assessed using data from 50 sediment profiles, constrained by tephrochronology, located in the farm infields (tún) and outfields (hagi). This record indicates that despite similar outward appearances today, the environs of Dalur and Mörk have experienced different histories of environmental change over the last 1000 years. At least 14 subsidiary settlements were at one time or another established within Dalur, or were dependent on the Church farm there. Ten of these settlements were subsequently abandoned and sediment accumulation rates, a proxy indicator of erosion, remained low, indicating restricted local human impact. We conclude that this illustrates the importance of access and rights to additional resources out with the principal farm. In addition, much of the immediate environs of the main farm site was probably un-wooded at the time of settlement, so the total degree of vegetative change was limited. In contrast, palaeoenvironmental data indicates that the environs of Mörk were extensively wooded at the time of Landnám, but this woodland was rapidly cleared and this was followed by several centuries of landscape instability. In a cultural contrast, the landholdings of Mörk experienced less subdivision with a total of only five dependent farms established across the land belonging to three main farms (all of which had chapels). From the early 10th to 14th centuries there was significantly enhanced erosion within the Mörk landholdings, but this stabilised and the principal farms endured and to form sites of long-term settlement. The ownership of additional resource rights, including woodland further up-valley, may have made the crucial contribution to long term endurance. Book Part Arctic Iceland Durham University: Durham Research Online Tún ENVELOPE(-20.926,-20.926,63.938,63.938)
institution Open Polar
collection Durham University: Durham Research Online
op_collection_id ftunivdurham
language unknown
topic Settlement and abandonment
Woodland clearance
Soil erosion
Iceland
Norse
spellingShingle Settlement and abandonment
Woodland clearance
Soil erosion
Iceland
Norse
Mairs, K-A.
Church, M. J.
Dugmore, A. J.
Sveinbjarnardóttir, G.
Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.
topic_facet Settlement and abandonment
Woodland clearance
Soil erosion
Iceland
Norse
description This paper focuses on the occupation and landscape history of Dalur and Mörk, two areas of long-term settlement in the Eyjafjallahreppur district of southern Iceland. The aim is to illustrate the importance of evaluating not only farm occupation and abandonment, but also to assess the complexities of the environmental interactions of long-term settlements. Environmental records are assessed using data from 50 sediment profiles, constrained by tephrochronology, located in the farm infields (tún) and outfields (hagi). This record indicates that despite similar outward appearances today, the environs of Dalur and Mörk have experienced different histories of environmental change over the last 1000 years. At least 14 subsidiary settlements were at one time or another established within Dalur, or were dependent on the Church farm there. Ten of these settlements were subsequently abandoned and sediment accumulation rates, a proxy indicator of erosion, remained low, indicating restricted local human impact. We conclude that this illustrates the importance of access and rights to additional resources out with the principal farm. In addition, much of the immediate environs of the main farm site was probably un-wooded at the time of settlement, so the total degree of vegetative change was limited. In contrast, palaeoenvironmental data indicates that the environs of Mörk were extensively wooded at the time of Landnám, but this woodland was rapidly cleared and this was followed by several centuries of landscape instability. In a cultural contrast, the landholdings of Mörk experienced less subdivision with a total of only five dependent farms established across the land belonging to three main farms (all of which had chapels). From the early 10th to 14th centuries there was significantly enhanced erosion within the Mörk landholdings, but this stabilised and the principal farms endured and to form sites of long-term settlement. The ownership of additional resource rights, including woodland further up-valley, may have made the crucial contribution to long term endurance.
author2 Arneborg, J
Grønnow, B
format Book Part
author Mairs, K-A.
Church, M. J.
Dugmore, A. J.
Sveinbjarnardóttir, G.
author_facet Mairs, K-A.
Church, M. J.
Dugmore, A. J.
Sveinbjarnardóttir, G.
author_sort Mairs, K-A.
title Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.
title_short Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.
title_full Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.
title_fullStr Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.
title_full_unstemmed Degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in South Iceland.
title_sort degrees of success : evaluating the environmental impacts of long term settlement in south iceland.
publisher Aarhus University Press
publishDate 2006
url http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/
http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/1/5242.pdf
http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/List.aspx?l=c&id=10097
long_lat ENVELOPE(-20.926,-20.926,63.938,63.938)
geographic Tún
geographic_facet Tún
genre Arctic
Iceland
genre_facet Arctic
Iceland
op_source Arneborg, J & Grønnow, B (Eds.). (2006). Dynamics of northern societies : proceedings of the SILA/NABO Conference on Arctic and North Atlantic Archaeology, Copenhagen, May 10th-14th, 2004. Copenhagen: Aarhus University Press, pp. 365-373, PNM studies in archaeology & history(10)
op_relation dro:5242
http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/
http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/List.aspx?l=c&id=10097
http://dro.dur.ac.uk/5242/1/5242.pdf
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