Burnt mound, Graigueshoneen, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In a forestry drainage trench running through the valley of the Mahon River in County Waterford, a small pocket of broken and burnt stone sits largely unnoticed. Measuring roughly three metres long and less than half a metre thick, it is easy to dismiss as agricultural debris or the residue of land clearance. It is neither. What the trench has exposed is a burnt mound, one of the most common yet least understood monument types in the Irish archaeological record.
Burnt mounds, known in Irish archaeology as fulachtaí fia, are spreads of fire-cracked stone typically found near water sources. The accepted explanation for most of them is that they served as prehistoric cooking sites, where stones were heated in a fire and then dropped into a water-filled trough to bring the water to the boil. The repeated heating and sudden cooling causes the stones to fracture and blacken, and over time the discarded fragments accumulate into a mound. The form is prehistoric in origin, though the precise dating varies considerably from site to site. The location of the Graigueshoneen example follows a pattern seen across Ireland: close to a river, in low-lying ground, where water would have been reliably accessible. Here, that river is the Mahon, which runs on a broadly north-south course through this part of Waterford.
What the drainage trench has inadvertently done is provide a cross-section through the deposit, revealing its composition without any formal excavation. The fragmentary, scorched stone visible in the cut is the diagnostic signature of the type. Sites like this one rarely attract attention precisely because they leave so modest a trace above ground, and many have been damaged or destroyed by the kind of routine drainage and forestry work that, in this case, happened to expose one instead.