Cairn, Moneygold, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Cairns
On a west-facing slope near the summit of a ridge in Moneygold, County Sligo, a low mound of rubble limestone sits quietly in the middle of a working pasture.
It is easy to overlook, and that is part of what makes it worth attention. Cairns, broadly speaking, are deliberate accumulations of stone, built by human hands for purposes that vary widely across time, from burial and ritual to boundary-marking and simple field clearance. This one measures roughly eight metres along its north-east to south-west axis and five metres across, and its perimeter is defined by a low scarp, a step-like edge in the ground surface, rising to about forty centimetres on the exterior. The form is roughly semi-circular rather than the rounded dome more commonly associated with prehistoric burial cairns, which raises quiet questions about what, exactly, it was built to do.
What gives the site an additional layer of interest is that it does not stand alone. A closely comparable cairn lies just ten metres to the south-west, suggesting either a paired arrangement or the remnants of a more extensive pattern of activity across this ridge. The two features sit in relation to each other in a way that feels deliberate rather than incidental. The cairn at Moneygold also abuts a straight field wall running along the same north-east to south-west orientation, which complicates the picture: the wall may post-date the cairn and have been built up against it, incorporating it as a convenient boundary feature, or the relationship between the two may be more ambiguous. Limestone rubble of the kind used here is characteristic of the Sligo landscape, where the underlying geology makes flat, workable stone readily available, and field walls and clearance cairns built from it are a common feature of the agricultural past.