Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Historical Ecology on Sandoy, Faroe Islands: Palaeoenvironmental and Archaeological Perspectives

  • Published:
Human Ecology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

We present palaeoenvironmental, geomorphological, archaeological, and place-name data which allow a holistic assessment of the history of landscape change on Sandoy, Faroe Islands, especially in terms of the changes that occurred in response to the colonization of the island by humans. In contrast to other situations in the North Atlantic region, there is considerable continuity in the patterns and processes of landscape evolution across the initial settlement horizon. Many of the characteristic features of post-settlement North Atlantic landscapes—absence of trees, widespread blanket mires, high rates of soil erosion—were already in place when the first people arrived. Although human impact on Sandoy appears to have been light, conversely, the unusual environment forced major alterations of the subsistence economy imported by the colonists. Settlement-era archaeological records suggest that, from the start, patterns of resource use differed substantially from the regional norm, and these differences became amplified over time as the Faroese economy created a locally sustainable cultural landscape.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Adderley, W. P., and Simpson, I. A. (2005). Early-Norse home-field productivity in the Faroe Islands. Human Ecology 33(5): 711–735.

    Google Scholar 

  • Amorosi, T. (1992). Climate impact and human response at Svalbarð farm, NE Iceland. In Morris, C. D., and Rackham, J. (eds.), Norse and Later Settlement and Subsistence in the North Atlantic, Glasgow University Press, Glasgow, pp. 131–152.

    Google Scholar 

  • Amorosi, T., Woollett, J. W., Perdikaris, S., and McGovern, T. H. (1996). Regional zooarchaeology and global change research: Problems and potentials. World Archaeology 28: 126–157.

    Google Scholar 

  • Arge, S. V. (1991). The Landnám in the Faroes. Arctic Anthropology 28: 101–120.

    Google Scholar 

  • Arge, S. V. (2001). Forn búsetning heima á Sandi. Frøði 2: 5–13.

    Google Scholar 

  • Arge, S. V. (in press). Uttangarðs, a characteristic of relics in the Faroe outfield. In Proceedings of the Interdisciplinary Conference: “Utmark” (The Outfield/Wasteland)—as Industry and Ideology in the Iron Age and Middle Ages.” September 25–28, 2003, Bergen, Norway.

  • Barlow, L. K., Sadler, J. P., Ogilvie, A. E. J., Buckland, P. C., Amorosi, T., Ingimundarson, J. H., Skidmore, P., Dugmore, A. J., and McGovern, T. H. (1997). Interdisciplinary investigations of the end of the Norse western settlement in Greenland. The Holocene 7: 489–499.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bennett, K. D., and Willis, K. J. (2002). Pollen. In Smol, J. P., Birks, H. J. B., and Last, W. M. (eds.), Tracking Environmental Change Using Lake Sediments, Vol. 3: Terrestrial, Algal and Siliceous Indicators, Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 5–32.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bennett, K. D., Boreham, S., Sharp, M. J., and Switsur, V. R. (1992). Holocene history of environment, vegetation and human settlement on Catta Ness, Lunnasting, Shetland. Journal of Ecology 80: 241–273.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bennett, K. D., Bunting, M. J., and Fossitt, J. A. (1997). Long-term vegetation change in the Western and Northern Isles, Scotland. Botanical Journal of Scotland 49: 127–140.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bond, J. (2002). Pictish pigs and Celtic cowboys: Food and farming in the Atlantic Iron Age. In Ballin Smith, B., and Banks, I. (eds.), In the Shadow of the Brochs: the Iron Age in Scotland, Tempus Publishing, Stroud, pp. 177–184.

    Google Scholar 

  • Brandt, J. (1996). Sheep breeding on Eastern Sandoy. In Guttesen, R. (ed.), The Faeroe Islands Topographic Atlas, Det Kongelige Danske Geografiska Selskab and Kort & Matrikelstyrelsen, Copenhagen, pp. 82–84.

    Google Scholar 

  • Brayshay, B. A., Gilbertson, D. D., Kent, M., Edwards, K. J., Wathern, P., and Weaver, R. E. (2000). Surface pollen-vegetation relationships on the Atlantic seaboard: South Uist, Scotland. Journal of Biogeography 27: 359–378.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bronk Ramsey, C. (2003). OxCal Version 3.9. (http://www.units.ox.ac.uk/departments/rlaha/orau/06_ind.html).

  • Brooks, S. J., Bennion, H., and Birks, H. J. B. (2001). Tracing lake trophic history with a chironomid-total phosphorus inference model. Freshwater Biology 46: 513–533.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Buckland, P. C., Edwards, K. J., Sadler, J. P., and Dinnin, M. H. (1998). Late Holocene insect faunas from Mykines, Faroe Islands, with observations on associated pollen and early settlement records. Fróðskaparrit 48: 287–296.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bunting, M. J. (1996). The development of heathland in Orkney, Scotland: Pollen records from Loch of Knitchen (Roussay) and Loch of Torness (Hoy). The Holocene 6: 193– 212.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bunting, M. J. (2003). Pollen-vegetation relationships in non-arboreal moorland taxa. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 125: 285–298.

    Google Scholar 

  • Charman, D. J. (1992). Blanket mire formation at the Cross Lochs, Sutherland, northern Scotland. Boreas 21: 53–72.

    Google Scholar 

  • Charman, D. J. (2002). Peatlands and Environmental Change, Wiley, Chichester.

    Google Scholar 

  • Church, M. J. (2002). Plants and people in the later prehistoric and Norse periods of the Western Isles of Scotland, Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of Edinburgh.

  • Church, M. J., and Peters, C. (2004). Application of mineral magnetism in Atlantic Scotland archaeology 2: Archaeobotanical taphonomy in Atlantic Scotland. In Housley, R., and Coles, G. M. (eds.), Atlantic connections and adaptations: economies, environments and subsistence in lands bordering the North Atlantic, Oxbow, Oxford, pp. 99–115.

  • Church, M. J., Arge, S. V., Brewington, S., McGovern, T. H., Woollett, J. W., Perdikaris, S., Lawson, I. T., Amundsen, C., Harrison, R., and Krivogorskaya, K. (2005). Puffins, pigs, cod, and barley: Palaeoeconomy at Undir Junkarinsfløtti, Sandoy, Faroe Islands. Environmental Archaeology 10: 179–197.

    Google Scholar 

  • Crawford, R. M. M. (2000). Ecological hazards of oceanic environments. New Phytologist 147: 257–281.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Dean, W. E. (1974). Determination of carbonate and organic matter in calcareous sediments and sedimentary rocks by loss-on-ignition: Comparison with other methods. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 44: 242–248.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dearing, J. A. (1999). Magnetic susceptibility. In Walden, J., Oldfield, F., and Smith, J. P. (eds.), Environmental Magnetism: A Practical Guide, Technical Guide No. 6, Quaternary Research Association, London, pp. 35–62.

  • Dennis, A., Foote, P., and Perkins, R. (2000). The Laws of Early Iceland Grágás, Vol. II, University of Manitoba Press, Winnipeg.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickson, C. A. (1998). Past uses of turf in the Northern Isles. In Milles, C., and Coles, G. M. (eds.), On the Edge: Settlement in Marginal Areas, Oxbow, Oxford, pp. 105– 109.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickson, J. H. (1992). North American driftwood, especially Picea (spruce), from archaeological sites in the Hebrides and Northern Isles of Scotland. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 73: 49–56.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Dugmore, A. J., and Buckland, P. C. (1991). Tephrochronology and late Holocene soil erosion in Iceland. In Maizels, J., and Caseldine, C. (eds.), Environmental Change in Iceland, Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 147–159.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dugmore, A. J., Buckland, P. C., Church, M. J., Dawson, A., Edwards, K. J., Keller, C., Mayewski, P., McGovern, T. H., Mairs, K.-A., and Sveinbjarnardóttir, G. (in press). High-resolution proxy climate records from the Greenland icesheet, settlement and landscape change in the North Atlantic islands. Human Ecology 33(5).

  • Edwards, K. J. (1996). A Mesolithic of the Western and Northern Isles of Scotland? Evidence from pollen and charcoal. In Pollard, T., and Morrison, A. (eds.), The Early Prehistory of Scotland, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, pp. 23–38.

  • Edwards, K. J., Borthwick, D., Cook, G., Dugmore, A. J., Mairs, K.-A., Church, M. J., Simpson, I. A., and Adderley, W. P. (2005). A hypothesis-based approach to landscape change in Suðuroy, Faroe Islands. Human Ecology 33(5): 621–650.

    Google Scholar 

  • Edwards, K. J., and Whittington, G. (2001). Lake sediments, erosion and landscape change during the Holocene in Britain and Ireland. Catena 42: 143–173.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Enghoff, I. B. (2003). Hunting, fishing, and animal husbandry at the Farm Beneath the Sand, Western Greenland: An archaeozoological analysis of a Norse farm in the Western Settlement, Meddelelser om Grønland Man and Society 28, Copenhagen.

    Google Scholar 

  • Fosaa, A. M. (2000). Wildflowers in the Faroe Islands, Føroya Náttúrugripasavn, Tórshavn.

    Google Scholar 

  • Fosaa, A. M. (2001). A review of plant communities of the Faroe Islands. Fróðskaparrit 48: 41–54.

    Google Scholar 

  • Grime, J. P., Hodgson, J. G., and Hunt, R. (1988). Comparative Plant Ecology: A Functional Approach to Common British Species, Unwin Hyman, London.

    Google Scholar 

  • Guttesen, R. (2001). Plant production of a Faeroese farm 1813–1892, related to climatic fluctuations. Geografisk Tidsskrift, Danish Journal of Geography 101: 67–76.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hallsdóttir, M. (1987). Pollen analytical studies of human influence on vegetation in relation to the landnam tephra layer in Southwest Iceland, LUNDQUA Thesis 18, Lund University.

  • Hannon, G. E., and Bradshaw, R. H. W. (2000). Impacts and timing of the first human settlement on vegetation of the Faroe islands. Quaternary Research 54: 404–413.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hannon, G. E., Hermanns-Auðardóttir, M., and Wastegård, S. (1998). Human impact at Tjørnuvík on the Faroe Islands. Fróðskaparrit 46: 215–228.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hannon, G. E., Wastegård, S., Bradshaw, E., and Bradshaw, R. H. W. (2001). Human impact and landscape degradation on the Faroe Islands. Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 101B: 129–139.

  • Humlum, O., and Christiansen, H. H. (1998). Late Holocene climatic forcing of geomorphic activity in the Faroe Islands. Fróðskaparrit 46: 169–189.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jóhansen, J. (1971). A Palaeobotanical study indicating a pre-viking settlement in Tjørnuvík, Faroe Islands. Fróðskaparrit 19: 147–157.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jóhansen, J. (1975). Pollen diagrams from the Shetland and Faroe Islands. New Phytologist 75: 369–387.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jóhansen, J. (1982). Vegetational development in the Faroes from 10,000 BP to the present. Danmarks Geologiske Undersøgelse Årbog 1981: 111–136.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jóhansen, J. (1985). Studies in the vegetational history of the Faroe and Shetland Islands, Føroya Fróðskaparfelag, Tórshavn.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jóhansen, J. (1989). Survey of geology, climate and vegetation history. In Højgaard, A., Jóhansen, J., and Odum, S. (eds.), A Century of Tree-planting in the Faroe Islands, Føroya Fróðskaparfelag, Tórshavn, pp. 11–15.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jones, M. K. (1991). Sampling in palaeoethnobotany. In van Zeist, W., Wasylikowa, K., and Behre, K. E. (eds.), Progress in Old World Palaeoethnobotany, A. A. Balkema, Rotterdam, pp. 53–62.

    Google Scholar 

  • Kaland, P. E. (1986). The origin and management of Norwegian coastal heaths as reflected by pollen analysis. In Behre, K. E. (ed.), Anthropogenic Indicators in Pollen Diagrams, A.A. Balkema, Rotterdam, pp. 19–36.

  • Kristjánson, L. (1980). Íslenzkir Sjávarhættir I, Bókaútgáfa Menningarsjóðs, Reykjavík.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lang, B., Bedford, A. P., Richardson, N., and Brooks, S. J. (2003). The use of ultra-sound in the preparation of carbonate and clay sediments for chironomid analysis. Journal of Paleolimnology 30: 451–460.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Larson, L. M. (1917). The King's Mirror, Twayne, New York.

    Google Scholar 

  • Malmros, C. (1990). Viking Age wood resources at Argisbrekka, Faroe Islands. Norwegian Archaeological Review 23: 86–92.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Malmros, C. (1994). Exploitation of local, drifted and imported wood by the Vikings on the Faroe Islands. Botanical Journal of Scotland 46: 552–558.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • McGovern, T. H. (1985). Contributions to the Paleoeconomy of Norse Greenland. Acta Archaeologica 54: 73–122.

    Google Scholar 

  • McGovern, T. H. (1997). Climate change and created vulnerability in Norse Greenland. Climate and man in the Arctic: Proceedings from a seminar held by the Danish Polar Center, 27 March, 1996, Danish Polar Center, Copenhagen, pp. 34–43.

  • McGovern, T. H., Buckland, P. C., Sveinbjarnardóttir, G., Savory, D., Skidmore, P., and Andreasen, C. (1983). A study of the faunal and floral remains from two Norse farms in the Western Settlement, Greenland. Arctic Anthropology 20: 93–120.

    Google Scholar 

  • McGovern, T. H., Bigelow, G. F., Amorosi, T., Woollett, J. W., and Perdikaris, S. (1993). Animal bones from E17a Narsaq. In Vebaek, C. L. (ed.), Narsaq: A Norse Landnáma Farm, Meddelelser om Grønland Man and Society 18, Copenhagen.

    Google Scholar 

  • McGovern, T. H., Amorosi, T., Perdikaris, S., and Woollett, J. W. (1996). Zooarchaeology of Sandnes V51: Economic Change at a Chieftain's Farm in West Greenland. Arctic Anthropology 33: 94–122.

    Google Scholar 

  • McGovern, T. H., and Jordan, R. H. (1982). Settlement and landuse in the inner fjords of Godthaab District, West Greenland. Arctic Anthropology 19: 63–80.

    Google Scholar 

  • McGovern, T. H., Perdikaris, S., and Tinsley, C. (2001). Economy of Landnám: The evidence of zooarchaeology. In Wawn, A., and Sigurðardottir, T. (eds.), Approaches to Vinland, Nordahl Institute Studies 4, Reykjavík, pp. 154–166.

    Google Scholar 

  • Meeker, L. D., and Mayewski, P. A. (2002). A 1400 year long record of atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic and Asia. The Holocene 12: 257–266.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Moore, P. D. (1975). Origin of blanket mires. Nature 256: 267–269.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Moore, P. D. (1993). The origin of blanket mire, revisited. In Chambers, F. M. (ed.), Climate Change and Human Impact on the Landscape, Chapman and Hall, London, pp. 217– 224.

    Google Scholar 

  • Nolan, A. J., Henderson, D. J., and Merrell, B. G. (1995). The vegetation dynamics of wet heaths in relation to sheep grazing intensity. In Thompson, D. B. A., Hester, A. J., and Usher, M. B. (eds.), Heaths and Moorland: Cultural Landscapes, HMSO, Edinburgh, pp. 174–179.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ólafsdóttir, R. (2001). Land degradation and climate in Iceland: a spatial and temporal assessment. PhD thesis, Lund University.

  • Outram, A. K. (1999). A Comparison of Palaeoeskimo and Medieval Norse Bone fat Exploitation in Western Greenland. Arctic Anthropology 36: 103–117.

    Google Scholar 

  • Outram, A. K. (2003). Comparing levels of subsistence stress amongst Norse settlers in Iceland and Greenland using levels of bone fat exploitation as an indicator. Environmental Archaeology 8: 119–128.

    Google Scholar 

  • Perdikaris, S., Amundsen, C., and McGovern, T. H. (2002). Report of Animal Bones from Tjarnargata 3C, Reykjavík, Iceland, unpublished report submitted to Fornleifastofnan Íslands, Reykjavík.

  • Perdikaris, S., and McGovern, T. H. (in press). Cod Fish, Walrus, and Chieftains: Economic Intensification in the Norse North Atlantic. In Thurston, T. (ed.), New Perspectives on Intensification, Plenum, New York.

  • Randall, R. E., Andrew, R., and West, R. G. (1986). Pollen catchment in relation to local vegetation: Ceann Ear, Monach Isles N. N. R., Outer Hebrides. New Phytologist 104: 271–310.

    Google Scholar 

  • Rasmussen, J. (1982). The Faeroe Islands: Geology. In Rutherford, G. K. (ed.), The Physical Environment of the Faeroe Islands, Monographiae Biologicae Volume 46, Junk Publishers, The Hague, pp. 13–34.

    Google Scholar 

  • Simpson, I. A., Dugmore, A. J., Thomson, A., and Vésteinsson, O. (2001). Crossing the thresholds: Human ecology and historical patterns of landscape degradation. Catena 42: 175–192.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Simpson, I. A., Guðmundsson, G., Thomson, A. M., and Cluett, J. (2004). Assessing the role of winter grazing in historic land degradation, Mývatnssveit, northeast Iceland. Geoarchaeology 19: 471–502.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Small, A. (1992). The juniper decline during the Norse landnam in the Faroe Islands. Acta Borealia 91: 3–7.

    Google Scholar 

  • Sobey, D. G. (1981). Biological flora of the British Isles. Stellaria media (L.) Vill. Journal of Ecology 69: 311–335.

    Google Scholar 

  • Solem, T. (1989). Blanket mire formations at Haramsøy, Møre og Romsdal, Western Norway. Boreas 18: 221–235.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stevenson, A. C., and Thompson, D. B. A. (1993). Long-term changes in the extent of heather moorland in upland Britain and Ireland: Palaeoecological evidence for the importance of grazing. The Holocene 3: 70–76.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stace, C. (1997). New flora of the British Isles, 2nd edn. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stuiver, M., Reimer, P. J., Bard, E., Beck, J. W., Burr, G. S., Hughen, K. A., Kromer, B., McCormac, G., Van der Plicht, J., and Spurk, M. (1998). INTCAL98 radiocarbon age calibration, 24,000–0 cal BP. Radiocarbon 40: 1041–1083.

    Google Scholar 

  • Tyldesley, J. B. (1973). Long-range transmission of tree pollen to Shetland. III. frequencies over the past hundred years. New Phytologist 72: 691–698.

    Google Scholar 

  • Vésteinsson, O., McGovern, T. H., and Keller, C. (2002). Enduring Impacts: Social and Environmental Aspects of Viking Age Settlement in Iceland and Greenland. Archaeologia Islandica 2: 98–136.

    Google Scholar 

  • Vickers, K., Bending, J., Buckland, P. C., Edwards, K. J., Hansen, S. S., and Cook, G. (2005). Toftanes: The paleoecology of a Faroese Landnám farm. Human Ecology 33(5): 685–710.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ward, J., and Mainland, I. (1999). Microwear in modern rooting and stall fed pigs. Environmental Archaeology 4: 25–33.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wastegård, S. (2002). Early to middle Holocene silicic tephra horizons from the Katla volcanic system, Iceland: New results from the Faroe Islands. The Holocene 2002: 723–730.

    Google Scholar 

  • Woollett, J. W., Arge, S. V., Church, M. J., and McGovern, T. H. (2004). A report of archaeological fieldwork at Undir Junkarinsfløtti, Sandur, Sandoy, 2003. Unpublished Landscapes circum-Landnám Project Field Report.

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Ian T. Lawson.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Lawson, I.T., Church, M.J., McGovern, T.H. et al. Historical Ecology on Sandoy, Faroe Islands: Palaeoenvironmental and Archaeological Perspectives. Hum Ecol 33, 651–684 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-005-7681-1

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-005-7681-1

Key Words

Navigation