Enclosure, Boolabrien, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Enclosures
Somewhere in the townland of Boolabrien in County Waterford, there is an enclosure that exists, for all practical purposes, only from the air. At ground level, nothing has been identified. No earthwork, no obvious boundary, no feature that a walker crossing the land would pause to examine. The site is known solely because aerial photography caught something that the human eye, standing in the field, cannot resolve into meaning.
This kind of discovery is less unusual than it might seem, but it remains quietly unsettling. Cropmarks and soil marks, the faint signatures that buried or degraded features leave on the surface vegetation above them, can reveal the outlines of ancient enclosures, ringforts, or field systems that centuries of agriculture and erosion have reduced to near-invisibility at ground level. An enclosure, in the Irish archaeological sense, typically refers to a defined area bounded by a bank, ditch, wall, or some combination of these, and such features were used across a vast span of time for settlement, for farming, for ritual. What purpose the Boolabrien enclosure served, and when it was constructed, remains unresolved. Without excavation or further survey, the aerial outline is essentially the entirety of what is known.