Burnt mound, Mountbolton, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
On the western bank of a small stream near Mountbolton in County Waterford, a layer of broken and fire-cracked stone sits exposed in the stream section, stretching roughly ten metres in length and about twenty centimetres thick. To a passing eye it might look like rubble or natural deposit, but this scatter of shattered rock is the surviving trace of a burnt mound, one of the most common yet least-discussed monument types in the Irish archaeological landscape.
Burnt mounds are the residue of a Bronze Age process that involved heating stones in a fire and plunging them into a water-filled trough to bring the water rapidly to the boil. The cracked and blackened stones, useless for reheating, were simply discarded nearby, accumulating over time into the characteristic mounds or spreads that archaeologists now recognise across Ireland and Britain. They cluster beside streams and wetland areas for obvious reasons, and the Mountbolton example follows that pattern precisely, positioned on the bank of a south-to-north flowing stream that would have supplied a steady source of water. What the site was actually used for remains a matter of debate among researchers; cooking, bathing, textile processing, and various craft activities have all been proposed, and it is quite possible that different communities used the same basic technology for very different ends. What survives at Mountbolton is modest in scale, just that thin but tangible band of burnt and fractured stone visible where the stream has cut through the deposit, but it represents activity carried out here perhaps three or four thousand years ago by people who returned to this particular waterside spot with enough regularity to leave a mark that outlasted everything else they ever made.