Enclosure, Knockderk, Co. Limerick

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Enclosures

Enclosure, Knockderk, Co. Limerick

Some archaeological sites announce themselves with standing stones or crumbling walls.

This one announces itself with nothing at all. On the lower western slope of Derk Hill in County Limerick, a circular enclosure lies buried beneath improved pasture, leaving no trace visible to anyone walking across it. No earthwork, no hollow, no ridge in the grass. The only evidence that something once stood here came from the air.

The enclosure was identified during an aerial photographic survey carried out by the Bruff survey programme in 1986, captured on photograph AP 4/3629. From that altitude, a circular cropmark became legible in the ground, the kind of subtle discolouration that appears when buried foundations or ditches alter how grass or crops grow above them. Cropmarks like this are one of archaeology's quieter tools, revealing features that centuries of ploughing and land improvement have long since erased at surface level. The site does not appear on any historic Ordnance Survey Ireland maps, which suggests it either predates systematic mapping or was already invisible by the time surveyors passed through. Subsequent orthophotos taken between 2005 and 2012, and a Google Earth image from September 2020, showed no surface remains whatsoever. A neighbouring enclosure, recorded separately under the reference LI033-074001, sits approximately 85 metres to the west, and a watercourse marking the townland boundary with Knockroe runs some 45 metres further west again. The summit of Derk Hill, at 781 feet above sea level, lies 775 metres to the east.

There is no physical monument to seek out here, which makes this site an unusual proposition for a visitor. The townland of Knockderk is accessible via the rural road network in south County Limerick, in the broader Bruff area. The interest lies less in what can be seen on the ground, which is to say nothing, and more in what the landscape conceals. If you have access to the aerial photograph reference or the Google Earth orthoimages compiled by Martin Fitzpatrick and uploaded to the record in March 2021, comparing those images against the ordinary green field visible today gives a fair sense of how much of Ireland's past has been quietly absorbed back into the soil.

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Pete F
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