Nýjar rannsóknir í íslenskri fornleifafræði: Joshua Needham

Aðalbygging
Stofa 050
Joshua William Needham heldur fyrirlestur í fyrirlestraröðinni Nýjar rannsóknir í íslenskri fornleifafræði sem haldin er á vegum Félags fornleifafræðinga, námsbrautar í fornleifafræði við HÍ og Þjóðminjasafns Íslands. Fyrirlestur Joshua nefnist Tracing Textile Production Tools Through Time at a Stratified Farm Mound Excavation in Norse Greenland.
Fyrirlesturinn fer fram í stofu A050 í Aðalbyggingu HÍ, miðvikudaginn 18. febrúar kl. 12:00-13:00. Einnig verður hægt að fylgjast með streymi hér.
Um fyrirlesturinn
This thesis examined the spindle whorls and loom weights from the medieval Norse site the Farm Beneath the Sand in the Western Settlement of Norse Greenland, ca. 1050 – 1380CE. This site is among few medieval Norse farm mounds in Greenland which have been excavated stratigraphically. Therefore, the common and ubiquitous aforementioned tools were used as proxies to determine whether the stratified methodology employed in this excavation allowed for changes in the tools themselves, and spaces associated with their use to be traced over time. To this end, the theoretical frameworks of Artifact Biography and Household Archaeology were utilized. The results of the analysis showed that the proportion of artifacts from the earlier phases of the site’s occupation were significantly smaller than those from the later occupation periods, making changes over time impossible to detect. However, the results of this thesis did illuminate notable aspects of steatite usage and resource acquisition in the western settlement. Furthermore, a comparison to another stratified excavation of a largely contemporary farm mound at Stóraborg in Iceland with a similar dichotomy between the earlier and later phases was made, lending some support to the suggestion that farm mound formation processes may directly affect the accumulation of artifact assemblages over time.
Joshua William Needham.
