As I
mentioned in my first GEES-ology blog post,
palynology can be applied, along with a whole host of other scientific
techniques, to help answer archaeological questions. One of my main research
interests lies in understanding how people interacted with their
environments during prehistoric times – not just the ways in which human
activities may have impacted upon the environment, but also the effects that environmental conditions may have had on the development of human culture and
society. I am particularly interested in how these human-environment
relationships may have differed in areas that are currently perceived to be
marginal for human settlement, and especially in island environments where
finite natural resources would have been available.
To date, my research in this field has focused on the islands of Orkney, situated about 10 km off the northern coast of
One of the houses at the Neolithic village of Skara Brae, occupied between about 3200 and 2500 BC |
The Stones of Stenness in west Mainland |
Berriedale Wood in northern Hoy: Britain's most northerly natural woodland, and the only patch of native woodland surviving in Orkney today |
It has
generally been argued that the Neolithic structures of Orkney have survived so
well because they were built in stone - the use of stone for construction seems
to have been rare elsewhere in Britain
at this time. Orkney today is largely treeless – in fact the only natural
woodland to be found on the islands is that at Berriedale
in northern Hoy, which actually represents the most northerly natural woodland
in the British Isles. There is a long-held assumption that Orkney has been
devoid of substantial woodland throughout much of the Holocene (the period of
time since the end of the last ice age, approximately 11,500 years ago, to the
present day). Was the use of stone for construction in Neolithic Orkney
therefore an environmental necessity?
Many of these early palaeoecological studies were hampered by poor dating of the sequences investigated, and when I plotted the dates of woodland decline from previous reliably dated studies, along with dates from new cores that I worked on for my PhD research, it became clear that the timing of woodland decline in Orkney differed between locations. At several sites woodland loss occurred in multiple stages, with fragments of woodland persisting into the Bronze Age in places. So it seems that woodland was present in parts of Orkney throughout the whole of the Neolithic period – but how valuable a resource would it have been to the islanders?
The
tendency to dismiss prehistoric Orcadian woodland as ‘scrub’ has led to the
assumption that it would not have been particularly valued as a resource by the
inhabitants of the islands. Whilst it is true that the woodland was probably
largely made up of species such as birch and hazel, even birch-hazel canopied
woodland can be a useful and rich resource. In the North Atlantic region,
environmental archaeologists have identified the management of birch woodland
as one of the most pressing issues in the Norse and medieval periods. The uses
of birch wood range from domestic fuel to the production of charcoal for iron
smelting, and there is palynological evidence from Greenland
that birch woodland was being sustainably managed, indicating the importance of
the resource to the human population. In Iceland , woodland was managed by
coppicing and access to woodland was controlled by the more powerful members of
society. Coppice management of woodland has been practised in Europe since the
Mesolithic period (c. 9000-4000 BC),
with evidence provided by artefacts such as fish traps found in Ireland and Denmark . There seems to be no
reason why the birch-hazel woodland of Orkney should not have been similarly
valued for the range of resources that it would have provided. In fact, there
may have been greater diversity in some areas, with the possibility that
species such as oak and pine also grew on Orkney, and this would only have
increased the range of possible uses and value of the resource. More on this in
a future blog post!
Remains of one of the wooden structures at Braes of Ha'Breck: the large post holes which would have held the timber uprights are clearly visible |
This blog post is based on the following article, which can be accessed here
Farrell,
M., Bunting, M.J., Thomas, A. and Lee, D. (in press) Neolithic settlement at
the woodland’s edge: palynological data and timber architecture in Orkney,
Scotland. Journal of Archaeological Science (2012),
doi:10.1016/j.jas.2012.05.042.
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