Enclosure, Dunnstown, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Enclosures
There are places that exist more convincingly in photographs taken from the air than they do on the ground beneath your feet. A field at Dunnstown in County Kildare is one such place. At ground level, it reads as ordinary pasture, level and well-drained, the kind of ground that has been farmed quietly for centuries without drawing much attention. But viewed from above, the soil tells a different story. A series of six small subrectangular cropmarks resolves out of the grass, faint geometries pressed into the earth that speak to structures or enclosures long since levelled.
Cropmarks of this kind form when buried features, such as ditches or foundations, affect the moisture and nutrient content of the soil above them. In dry conditions, crops or grass growing over a buried ditch will stay greener longer, while those over compacted surfaces stress earlier, and the difference becomes legible from altitude in a way that is invisible at eye level. The six enclosures at Dunnstown, catalogued together as a cluster, were identified through an aerial photograph held by the Geological Survey of Ireland. When the site was visited on the ground, no earthworks were apparent at all, the heavy grass cover concealing whatever slight surface variation might otherwise have hinted at what lay beneath. What these enclosures were originally, whether domestic, agricultural, or ceremonial, and when they were constructed, remains unresolved. The subrectangular form is broadly consistent with early medieval activity in the Irish countryside, though without excavation, that remains informed inference rather than established fact.