Barrow (Ditch barrow), Gibbonstown, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
A circular depression roughly seven metres across sits in reclaimed pasture in Gibbonstown, County Limerick, and it has never appeared on any Ordnance Survey Ireland historic map.
It is not marked, not named, and not officially counted among the landscape features most people think of when they think of prehistoric Ireland. What gives it away at all is a ditch, faint enough that it registers only from above, and only under the right conditions.
A ditch barrow is a burial mound defined not by a raised earthen heap but by the encircling ditch that once surrounded it. Over centuries of agriculture, the central mound can be ploughed flat or simply settle back into the ground, leaving only the ring of the ditch as a ghostly outline. In Gibbonstown, that outline became legible in satellite imagery. A Google Earth orthoimage captured on 5 April 2006 shows the circular form clearly enough for the site to be recorded, while a later image from 14 September 2019 reveals faint cropmark traces, the kind of subtle discolouration in vegetation that appears when buried features affect soil moisture and drainage differently from the surrounding ground. The record was compiled by Martin Fitzpatrick and uploaded in July 2021. A possible second barrow lies about 50 metres to the southwest, catalogued separately, and the site sits roughly 110 metres southeast of a watercourse that runs along the townland boundary with Bulgaden Eady.
There is no visitor infrastructure here, no signage, and no path leading to it. The feature lies in working farmland, which means access would require landowner permission and a good deal of patience with the ground underfoot, particularly in wetter months. The cropmark is the kind of thing that only makes sense when you already know what you are looking for and have the satellite image open beside you. For most people, the more useful encounter with this site happens through the National Monuments Service record rather than in the field. What it offers, even at that remove, is a reminder that the Irish landscape holds far more than the map has ever shown.