Enclosure, Ballybrack, Co. Carlow
Co. Carlow |
Enclosures
In the townland of Ballybrack in County Carlow, there is a site that exists almost entirely as an absence.
A circular enclosure, the kind of feature that in Ireland typically signals early medieval settlement or land division, shows up clearly when viewed from the air, its outline pressed into the earth as a cropmark or soil shadow. On the ground, nothing remains to see.
Aerial photography has long been one of archaeology's quieter tools, revealing features that centuries of ploughing, weather, and land use have erased from the surface. Where buried ditches or banks alter the moisture and nutrient content of the soil, the crops or grass above them grow at a slightly different rate, tracing out the ghost of whatever once stood there. The Ballybrack enclosure was identified through exactly this method, recorded on aerial photograph GSIAP R3/3. Beyond that single frame of evidence, little else is known about it: no date, no associated finds, no documentary record to suggest who built it or why.