Enclosure, Newtown, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Enclosures
Somewhere beneath a tilled field in Newtown, County Waterford, the outline of a circular enclosure sits quietly invisible to anyone walking across it. The structure, roughly forty metres in diameter, reveals itself only from above, where seasonal variation in crop growth traces the line of its fosse, a ditch dug into the earth, over the buried archaeology below. These cropmarks form when soil disturbed by ancient digging retains moisture differently from the surrounding ground, causing crops above to grow taller or ripen at a different rate. The result, invisible at ground level, can appear with striking clarity in aerial or satellite photography taken at exactly the right moment in the agricultural year.
The enclosure at Newtown was identified and reported by Jean-Charles Caillère, who spotted it on Google Earth satellite imagery dated 16 July 2022. That midsummer date is significant; late July imagery tends to capture the contrast between disturbed and undisturbed subsoil at its most legible, when cereal crops are ripening and the differences in soil moisture show most clearly from altitude. The enclosure is defined by its fosse, and while its precise date and function remain unconfirmed, circular enclosures of this kind are broadly associated with early medieval settlement in Ireland, often appearing in the same landscape as ringforts. A ringfort, a type of enclosed farmstead typically surrounded by an earthen bank, lies approximately two hundred metres to the north-north-west, raising the possibility that the two sites are related in some way, whether contemporary, sequential, or simply drawn to the same patch of workable ground over a long period of time.