Quarry, Stowlin, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Mining
Sometimes the most telling thing about a place is what is no longer there.
On a low hummock in the meadowland of Stowlin, County Galway, there once sat a gravel pit, dug at some point after 1700 and worked until it fell disused. By the time anyone went looking for it in 1984, the ground had absorbed it entirely, leaving no visible surface trace of the excavation that the Ordnance Survey had still thought worth marking on its maps.
The pit appears on the 1944 to 1945 revision of the six-inch OS map as a hachured feature, a cartographic convention using short radiating lines to suggest a hollow or depression in the ground. The larger twenty-five-inch OS plan names it plainly: Gravel Pit (Disused). That phrasing alone suggests it had already gone out of use well before the mid-twentieth century, reduced to a named absence on a map, and then, within a few decades, to no trace at all. Gravel extraction of this kind was common across rural Ireland, typically supplying material for road repair or farm drainage, the kind of small-scale, practical quarrying that left shallow scars rather than deep ones, and which the land has a way of quietly healing.