Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway

The transition from hunting to reindeer herding has been a central topic in a number of archaeological works. Recently conducted archaeological investigation of two interior hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway, have yielded new results that add significantly to the discussion. The sites are da...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sven-Donald Hedman, Bjørnar Olsen, Maria Vretemark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2015-02-01
Series:Rangifer
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/3334
id doaj-37f3816c3ae54497a343462bf3d44c02
record_format Article
spelling doaj-37f3816c3ae54497a343462bf3d44c022020-11-24T22:04:13ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingRangifer1890-67292015-02-0135110.7557/2.35.1.33343101Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic NorwaySven-Donald HedmanBjørnar OlsenMaria VretemarkThe transition from hunting to reindeer herding has been a central topic in a number of archaeological works. Recently conducted archaeological investigation of two interior hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway, have yielded new results that add significantly to the discussion. The sites are dated within the period 1000-1300 AD, and are unique within this corpus due to their rich bone assemblages. Among the species represented, reindeer is predominant (87 %), with fish (especially whitefish and pike) as the second most frequent category. Even sheep bones are present, and represent the earliest indisputable domesticate from any Sámi habitation site. A peculiar feature is the repeated spatial pattern in bone refuse disposal, showing a systematic and almost identical clustering at the two sites. Combining analyses of bone assemblages, artefacts and archaeological features, the paper discusses changes in settlement pattern, reindeer economies, and the organization of domestic space. The analyses provide new perspectives on early domestication as well as on the remarkable changes that took place among the Sámi societies in northern Fennoscandinavia during the Viking Age and early Medieval Period.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/3334
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sven-Donald Hedman
Bjørnar Olsen
Maria Vretemark
spellingShingle Sven-Donald Hedman
Bjørnar Olsen
Maria Vretemark
Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway
Rangifer
author_facet Sven-Donald Hedman
Bjørnar Olsen
Maria Vretemark
author_sort Sven-Donald Hedman
title Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway
title_short Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway
title_full Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway
title_fullStr Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway
title_full_unstemmed Hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway
title_sort hunters, herders and hearths: interpreting new results from hearth row sites in pasvik, arctic norway
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Rangifer
issn 1890-6729
publishDate 2015-02-01
description The transition from hunting to reindeer herding has been a central topic in a number of archaeological works. Recently conducted archaeological investigation of two interior hearth row sites in Pasvik, Arctic Norway, have yielded new results that add significantly to the discussion. The sites are dated within the period 1000-1300 AD, and are unique within this corpus due to their rich bone assemblages. Among the species represented, reindeer is predominant (87 %), with fish (especially whitefish and pike) as the second most frequent category. Even sheep bones are present, and represent the earliest indisputable domesticate from any Sámi habitation site. A peculiar feature is the repeated spatial pattern in bone refuse disposal, showing a systematic and almost identical clustering at the two sites. Combining analyses of bone assemblages, artefacts and archaeological features, the paper discusses changes in settlement pattern, reindeer economies, and the organization of domestic space. The analyses provide new perspectives on early domestication as well as on the remarkable changes that took place among the Sámi societies in northern Fennoscandinavia during the Viking Age and early Medieval Period.
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/3334
work_keys_str_mv AT svendonaldhedman huntersherdersandhearthsinterpretingnewresultsfromhearthrowsitesinpasvikarcticnorway
AT bjørnarolsen huntersherdersandhearthsinterpretingnewresultsfromhearthrowsitesinpasvikarcticnorway
AT mariavretemark huntersherdersandhearthsinterpretingnewresultsfromhearthrowsitesinpasvikarcticnorway
_version_ 1725829833485713408