Barrow, Garrynalyna, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
A field in County Limerick holds a secret that is only legible from the air.
What was once a clearly raised, oval mound in the pasture at Garrynalyna has, over the course of the twentieth century, effectively vanished at ground level, its contours flattened by centuries of agriculture until no surface remains are visible to someone walking the land. Yet overhead, the earth remembers. On a Google Earth image dated 18 November 2018, the buried monument reappears as a circular cropmark, a phenomenon where differences in soil depth and moisture cause overlying grass or crops to grow at subtly varying rates, tracing the outline of what lies beneath. A possible external bank is also discernible from the north-northwest to north-northeast arc of the image, suggesting the mound once had more structural complexity than a simple raised platform.
Earlier maps tell a more tangible story. The Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1840 recorded the feature as a raised, oval-shaped area defined by a scarp, a term referring to a steep face of earth that would have formed the edge of the mound. By the time of the twenty-five-inch edition of 1897, surveyors could still measure it: roughly 27 metres northwest to southeast and 26 metres northeast to southwest, but a post-1700 field boundary running northeast to southwest had already been cut across its southeastern side. A barrow is a burial mound, typically prehistoric in origin, raised over one or more interments and sometimes surrounded by a ditch or bank. The Garrynalyna example sits around 110 metres northeast of the townland boundary with Knockaunacurragha, and a further possible earthwork lies some 45 metres to the northwest, hinting that this corner of Limerick may once have held greater ceremonial or funerary significance than its current agricultural plainness suggests. The record was compiled by Fiona Rooney and uploaded to the national monuments database in November 2021.
The site sits in ordinary pasture and there is nothing at ground level to indicate what is underfoot. A linear feature running northwest to southeast intersects the monument at its northern point, adding another layer of later disturbance to an already much-altered landscape. For anyone interested in visiting, the practical reality is that the monument is on private farmland and the most meaningful view is not from the field at all but from satellite imagery, where the cropmark geometry becomes legible in the right seasonal conditions. Autumn images, when growth is low and soil moisture contrasts are sharpest, offer the clearest resolution. The experience of this place, then, is largely a desk one, a reminder that Ireland's archaeological record is not always something you can stand beside.