Platform - peatland, Derryoghil, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In a bog at Derryoghil in County Longford, a thin layer of ancient wood sits preserved in the peat, the remains of what appears to have been a deliberately constructed platform.
What makes it quietly remarkable is the care evident in its arrangement: closely set twigs and brushwood, running lengthwise in a north-north-east to south-south-west orientation, with the smallest material packed toward the centre and the larger pieces forming the outer edges, as though someone understood that structure required a framework.
The exposed portion was modest, roughly a quarter of a metre wide and fifteen centimetres thick, but the deliberate patterning of materials suggests a purposeful construction rather than casual debris. Peatland platforms of this kind were built across Ireland at various points in prehistory and the early medieval period, typically to create stable surfaces over waterlogged or boggy ground, whether as walkways, working areas, or access points to open water. The bog itself is the reason anything survives at all: the anaerobic, acidic conditions of a peatland suppress the bacterial decay that would ordinarily consume organic material entirely, leaving timber that might otherwise have vanished two thousand years ago.
