2005
DOI: 10.1179/env.2005.10.2.127
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Fishing Booths and Fishing Strategies in Medieval Iceland: an Archaeofauna from the of Akurvík, North-West Iceland

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Cited by 27 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Any fi sh shipped through the market to Europe had to have been produced elsewhere. As Figure 12 indicates, the proportion of identifi ed gadid fi sh species present at Gásir do not resemble the cod-dominated signatures of the nearly contemporary fi shing sites of Gjögur and Akurvík in the West Fjords (Amundsen et al 2005, but rather the haddock-rich inland "consumer" sites of Viking Age Mývatn (Hofstaðir and Sveigakot; McGovern et al 2006). This pattern suggests that the Gásir seasonal settlement was not being cheaply provisioned with dried cod produced in the previous winter from fi shing sites like Akurvík, nor were the Gásir residents simply consuming part of the dried cod which may have been a proportion of the Icelandic bulk goods being exported from Gásir.…”
Section: Marine Fishmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Any fi sh shipped through the market to Europe had to have been produced elsewhere. As Figure 12 indicates, the proportion of identifi ed gadid fi sh species present at Gásir do not resemble the cod-dominated signatures of the nearly contemporary fi shing sites of Gjögur and Akurvík in the West Fjords (Amundsen et al 2005, but rather the haddock-rich inland "consumer" sites of Viking Age Mývatn (Hofstaðir and Sveigakot; McGovern et al 2006). This pattern suggests that the Gásir seasonal settlement was not being cheaply provisioned with dried cod produced in the previous winter from fi shing sites like Akurvík, nor were the Gásir residents simply consuming part of the dried cod which may have been a proportion of the Icelandic bulk goods being exported from Gásir.…”
Section: Marine Fishmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clusters of small structures superficially similar individually to the Gásir buildings are found in many coastal areas, but these are specialized fishing stations occupied seasonally during the winter fishing, with their location closely tied to access to offshore fishing grounds (Edvardsson et al 2004). The oldest radiocarbon dated fishing station is at Akurvík in Strandasysla in the West Fjords, which has produced basal dates in the mid-13th century and terminal dates in the mid-15th century for a series of stratified occupations of a shell sand beach (Amundsen et al 2005). The Akurvík site has not been fully excavated, but investigations of a long erosion cut profile allowed the documentation of several early "fishing booth" structures dating to both early and late phases.…”
Section: Structures and Their Functionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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