Hearth, Aill An Phréacháin, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Settlement Sites
On the shoreline at Aill An Phréacháin, where Furbogh Stream meets An Trá Mór, a small patch of eroding cliff face has exposed something quietly arresting: a narrow band of charcoal and burnt stone, less than a metre across, reading in cross-section like the faintest signature of domestic life.
It is, in all likelihood, the remnant of a hearth, the kind of fire around which someone once cooked, kept warm, or simply waited out the weather on this stretch of the Galway coast.
What makes the site worth pausing over is precisely its modesty. The exposed material measures just 0.83 metres in length and 0.9 metres in thickness, overlain by a sod layer roughly 33 centimetres deep. That layering tells a small but legible story: habitation, abandonment, the slow accumulation of turf and time. The scarp face, the eroded edge of a raised beach or coastal bank, has done the accidental work of excavation, slicing through stratigraphy that would otherwise remain entirely invisible. Paul Gosling's Archaeological Inventory of County Galway, published in 1993, recorded the feature without assigning it a firm date, noting only that it probably represents the remains of a hearth. The caution is appropriate. Without further investigation, the burnt stone and charcoal could belong to almost any period of human settlement along this coast.