Enclosure, Ballygarrane, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Enclosures
Beneath the grass of a pasture field at Ballygarrane in County Cork, a circular ditch traces a ring about twenty-eight metres across.
It would be entirely invisible from the road, and largely invisible from the ground, were it not for a peculiarity of dry summers: when soil moisture drops unevenly, the buried ditch retains enough water to keep the grass above it fractionally greener than its surroundings, producing what archaeologists call a cropmark. This one was spotted not through any formal aerial survey, but through satellite imagery on Apple Maps.
The enclosure at Ballygarrane belongs to a category of monument common throughout Ireland, a roughly circular area defined by a ditch and likely once by an internal bank, broadly comparable to the ringforts that dot the Irish countryside in their thousands. Ringforts, known variously as raths or lios in Irish-language placenames, were typically farmstead enclosures dating from the early medieval period, though some earlier examples are known. What makes the Ballygarrane site worth noting is partly its invisibility and partly its company. Immediately to the west lies a second enclosure, already formally recorded, making this a paired arrangement. Such groupings are not unheard of, but they suggest something worth examining more carefully, whether that means associated farming activity, family groups, or simply different phases of use across a stretch of land that saw long occupation.
The identification of the site relied on Jean-Charles Caillère, whose scrutiny of commercial mapping imagery brought the cropmark to attention. It is a reminder that the archaeological record of Ireland continues to be revised and extended through methods that would have been unimaginable to earlier generations of fieldworkers, sometimes through nothing more than a careful eye and a publicly available satellite image.