Quarry, Killaspugmoylan, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Mining
There is a particular pleasure in following a cartographic mystery to its entirely mundane conclusion.
On the 1929 revision of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of County Galway, a roughly subcircular feature was marked near Killaspugmoylan using a series of dots, the kind of notation that can suggest, to an optimistic eye, an ancient enclosure, a ring fort, or some other earthwork deserving closer attention. When someone finally went to look in 1982, they found a gravel pit. Nothing more, nothing less.
The site falls outside the scope of archaeological protection because it post-dates AD 1700, which is the conventional threshold used to define what counts as an antiquity in Irish heritage surveying. The gravel pit at Killaspugmoylan is, in that sense, too recent to be of official archaeological interest, yet recent enough that no one thought to document it in detail through any other channel. It occupies a quiet administrative gap, recorded only because it was investigated and then formally set aside. The townland name itself, Killaspugmoylan, preserves older layers entirely absent from the pit: "kill" derives from the Irish "cill", meaning a church or monastic cell, suggesting ecclesiastical associations in the landscape that the gravel pit does nothing to illuminate.