Platform - peatland, Corragarrow, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the bogland around Corragarrow in County Longford, a drainage cut through the peat revealed something quietly puzzling: a scatter of ancient wood embedded in the exposed face, sitting at an angle to the modern landscape and carrying the faint marks of a blade.
There was no grand structure, no obvious symmetry, just thirteen pieces of brushwood and a single roundwood timber, preserved by the anaerobic conditions that make Irish bogs such unlikely archives of organic material.
The find was recorded by Dunne in 1999, under reference 99BG0013A. The exposed band stretched to a width of 2.8 metres along a drain face oriented to the west-southwest. The brushwood pieces ranged from roughly 2 to 5 centimetres in diameter, while the single roundwood piece was somewhat more substantial at 8 centimetres across. Most of the wood lay oriented on a northwest to southeast axis, though two pieces extended vertically down into the cut face, suggesting they had once been driven or placed upright. The toolmarks on some of the wood confirm that at least part of this material was deliberately worked rather than accidentally deposited. The interpretation offered is that this represents the remains of a peatland platform, a type of structure built from timber and brushwood to create a stable working or crossing surface over soft or waterlogged ground. Such platforms are known from Irish bogs in various periods, though without dating evidence from this particular site, it is impossible to say how old the Corragarrow example might be.
What makes the find interesting is not its scale but its ambiguity. There is no clear pattern to the arrangement of the timber, no obvious function that declares itself. A platform implies purpose, passage, or activity of some kind at this spot in the bog, but the evidence stops well short of explaining what that purpose was.