Road - road/trackway, Mitchelstowndown West, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Roads & Tracks
Somewhere beneath a field of reclaimed pasture in County Limerick, a road exists that appears on no Ordnance Survey map, leaves no trace visible from satellite imagery, and was only discovered because a gas pipeline happened to cut through it.
The road or trackway at Mitchelstowndown West is the kind of archaeological feature that most people walk over without any knowledge that something of historical significance lies underfoot, which is precisely what makes it worth knowing about.
The site came to light in 1986, when excavation work associated with a Bord Gáis Éireann pipeline was carried out in this part of County Limerick. The archaeologist Margaret Gowen led the investigation, recorded under BGE reference 2/20/4. The trackway lies approximately 70 metres west of the townland boundary with Raheennamadra, and around 140 metres to the west of a separate earthwork feature, recorded in the national monuments database as LI049-013. Earthworks in an Irish context often refer to the visible raised or sunken traces of earlier human activity, ranging from enclosures to field boundaries, though in this case the road and the earthwork are distinct features. The land has since been reclaimed as pasture, which explains both why no surface remains survive and why the site never made it onto standard mapping. Without the pipeline project, it would almost certainly have remained entirely unknown.
There is little to see here in any conventional sense. No marker exists on the ground, the Ordnance Survey maps carry no indication of the feature, and aerial or satellite images show nothing out of the ordinary. What the site offers instead is a particular kind of awareness: that the ordinary-looking fields of the Irish midlands and the Shannon region frequently conceal layers of activity stretching back centuries or further, recorded only in the grey literature of infrastructure projects and archaeological archives. Anyone with an interest in how such discoveries are made might find it worth consulting the excavation records through the National Monuments Service or the Irish Excavations database, where the documentation from Gowen's 1986 work may be traceable. The nearby earthwork to the east is at least recorded in the monuments database and may offer a point of context for understanding what kind of landscape this once was.