Fulacht fia, Lugdoon, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Settlement Sites
Two metres of marshy ground separate two prehistoric cooking sites in a steep-sided valley at Lugdoon in County Sligo, a detail that feels almost accidental until you consider how carefully these places were positioned in the landscape.
A fulacht fia is a type of ancient cooking or heating site found across Ireland in great numbers, typically identified by a horseshoe-shaped mound of burnt and cracked stone left behind after repeated cycles of fire-heating and water-boiling. The mound at Lugdoon sits on a small island of firm ground, hemmed in by wet, marshy terrain within a narrow valley. It measures roughly eight metres east to west and four metres north to south, rising to about 0.6 metres in height, with the characteristic open end of the horseshoe facing south. The proximity of marshland is not incidental; fulachtaí fia are almost always found near a reliable water source, and boggy ground would have kept a trough or pit filled without much effort. What makes this particular site quietly notable is the presence of a second fulacht fia just two metres to the north-north-west, the two monuments effectively sharing the same patch of dry ground within an otherwise waterlogged setting.