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Tephrochronology, Environmental Change and the Norse Settlement of Iceland

Authors :
G. Larsen
Andrew J. Dugmore
Gordon Cook
Anthony Newton
Source :
Environmental Archaeology. 5:21-34
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Maney Publishing, 2000.

Abstract

The first human impacts on the Icelandic environment came with the Norse colonisation or Landnam of the ninth century AD. The colonisation represents a fundamental environmental change that is both rapid and profound. In this paper we assess geomorphological dimensions of the initial settlement period using a tephrochronology that includes the Landnam Tephra, erupted ca. 870 AD, two tenth century AD tephras KR 920 and E 935, and 11 other well dated tephra layers. We report a new 14C age of 1676 ±12 14C yr BP (cal AD 345 (400) 419) for the tephra SILK-YN which forms a key prehistoric marker horizon that constrains rates of environmental change in the centuries before Norse Settlement. Aeolian sediment accumulation rates show five geomorphological responses to settlement that differ in the rate and trajectory of change. These distinct anthropogenic signals are the result of spatially variable sensitivity to grazing and deforestation, and reflect the extent of local soil erosion. This critical erosio...

Details

ISSN :
17496314 and 14614103
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Archaeology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0959309b04f53596fec4d2ae06c27c2c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1179/env.2000.5.1.21