Taking past movement seriously creates archaeological accounts that emphasize the entanglements between the human and nonhuman mobilities, giving them precedence in understanding a dynamic past. In this chapter, an archaeology of movement moves beyond its conventional treatment in which moving bodies are used to simply add weight to an already made narrative structured by the fixed parts of movement—its material systems—or in which moving bodies add an inhabited discourse to a series of generalized objects in a landscape. Instead, three interdependent aspects are explored. First, there is a focus on the relation itself between material systems and moving bodies by following specific objects as they moved in the past. Second, by attaching the concepts that underlie chaîne opératoire or operational chain, these relations are considered to be a part of a materializing set of practices. And third, by drawing a virtual line between different objects, the idea that objects were rarely fixed is introduced, in which they are considered to be highly mobile. These aspects are explored in a landscape context associated with nineteenth to early twentieth-century sheep farming in Northeast Iceland. As a result, the flows and forces that have shaped this community, the specific connections among these mobile objects, and their potential feedback emerge to reveal that movement is the key social connector. In this respect, movement is not something to be reduced to the background, but is given prominence at the foreground of our archaeological discourses.