Structure - peatland, Cloontamore, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the boglands of Cloontamore, County Longford, a single piece of worked timber emerged from the peat, oriented roughly east-south-east to west-north-west, bearing what appeared to be toolmarks.
It is the kind of find that catches the eye of a field surveyor and then refuses to give a clear answer about what it actually is.
The Irish midlands hold an extraordinary quantity of organic material preserved in their waterlogged bogs, ranging from trackways and platforms to dugout boats and structural timbers from early medieval settlements. Peatland archaeology is particularly difficult to assess, because timber can survive for thousands of years in anaerobic conditions, and a single worked piece might represent anything from a deliberate construction to a discarded offcut. In this case, the evidence stopped at the timber itself. The toolmarks confirmed human intervention at some point, but without additional structural elements, associated finds, or dating evidence, the find could not be accepted as the remains of a recognised archaeological monument. It sits in that uneasy category of things that are clearly not nothing, but cannot yet be called something specific.
