Barrow (Ring Barrow), Laraghbryan, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Barrows
At Laraghbryan in County Kildare, the ground itself holds a secret that only becomes legible from the air. A ring barrow, a type of prehistoric funerary monument typically consisting of a central burial mound enclosed by one or more encircling ditches, lies here in a form that is entirely invisible at ground level. What gives it away is the crop growing above it. Where ancient ditches were cut into the earth and later filled in, the soil retains more moisture, and the plants rooted there grow fractionally taller and greener than their neighbours. From above, these subtle differences in vegetation trace out the ghost of the original earthwork with surprising clarity.
What makes this particular example notable is that it appears to be trivallate, meaning it has three concentric encircling ditches rather than the single ditch more commonly associated with ring barrows. The outer diameter measures approximately 30 metres. The cropmark was identified on aerial imagery captured on 28 June 2018, with the detail brought to light through the combined efforts of Edward O'Riordan, who first noted it, and Caimin O'Brien, who compiled the record. The monument belongs to a broader prehistoric landscape in the Laraghbryan area, though the three-ditch arrangement is relatively unusual and suggests this was a site of some elaboration and, presumably, significance to the community that built it.
Because the barrow survives only as a cropmark, there is nothing visible on the surface for a visitor to observe from the ground. The monument exists, in a practical sense, as an absence, legible only through the language of aerial photography and the seasonal behaviour of whatever crop happens to be growing in the field above it.