期刊
ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY
卷 26, 期 2, 页码 238-250出版社
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14614103.2018.1558805
关键词
Seaweed; Iceland; North Atlantic; fuel; textiles; metalworking
Seaweed is an important element of diet and has various other uses due to its high mineral content. Recent excavations in northern Europe have uncovered charred remains of seaweed, associated with industry, food preservation, agriculture, and textile processing. Ethnohistoric evidence also suggests seaweed was used as fertilizer and in historical glass manufacture.
Seaweed forms an important element of diet in many parts of the world and has a wide variety of other uses due to its high mineral content. However, while seaweed remains are relatively frequently reported from archaeological contexts, its use in the past in northern Europe is little understood. Over the past two decades, charred remains of Fucus-type seaweed have been recovered from excavations of sites in Scandinavia and the North Atlantic mostly dated from the Iron Age to the Early Medieval period. At some locations charred seaweed appears to be associated with industry, such as the ironworking sites of Vatnsfjorour and L ae kjargata 10-12 in Iceland, and the silversmithing site of SOmme in southwestern Norway. At others charred seaweed finds have been variously interpreted as being related to the preservation of food, agriculture, and textile processing. Furthermore, ethnohistoric evidence documents burnt seaweed being used as fertiliser in arable fields, and seaweed ash is also known to have been historically used in glass manufacture. This paper examines how archaeologists can recover, recognise and interpret charred seaweed remains from archaeological sites, with a particular focus on finds from Iceland.
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