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Research article2016Peer reviewed

Was Moshyttan the earliest iron blast furnace in Sweden? The sediment record as an archeological toolbox

Myrstener, Erik; Lidberg, William ; Segerström, Ulf; Biester, Harald; Damell, David; Bindler, Richard

Abstract

Recently, archeological study of the establishment and spread of iron blast furnace technology in Sweden has suggested a phase of rapid expansion from AD 1150 to 1350, mainly in the historically important “Bergslagen” region in central Sweden. But the geographical extent and earliest development remains debated. One archeological investigation of Moshyttan, in the less studied western part of Bergslagen, suggested that it may have been established before 1150. To independently study the timing of blast furnace establishment at Moshyttan, and also the vegetation history of the area, we performed a multiproxy analysis of the sediment record from Fickeln, a small lake immediately downstream of the smelter site. We present radiocarbon dating (macrofossils and bulk sediment), pollen, charcoal particles and geochemistry. To establish a reliable age-depth model, ages of the bulk samples were corrected for old carbon and the model was validated by comparison to chronological markers (immigration ofPicea abiesand airborne lead-pollution) in other lakes with varved or otherwise robust chronologies. Based on markedly increasing lead concentrations, decreases in the206Pb/207Pb ratio towards values resembling Bergslagen ores, increasing charcoal particle counts and increases in iron and zinc concentrations, the establishment of the blast furnace is estimated to AD 1250–1300 with an age-depth model probability of 91%. This places the establishment of the blast furnace at Moshyttan within the known period of early expansion of iron blast furnaces in Sweden, rather than earlier as suggested by the earliest dates from the archeological study. The first signs of a human presence in the area can be seen in pollen associated with forest grazing from ca. 170BC, and the first signs of cultivation appear ca. AD 1020, preceding the blast furnace by 200years.

Keywords

Lake sediment; Geochemistry; Pollen; Charcoal particles; Blast furnace

Published in

Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
2016, Volume: 5, pages: 35-44