Burnt mound, Toor, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
Somewhere beneath a north-facing pasture slope in Toor, Co. Waterford, lies a site that has effectively vanished from view while remaining present in local memory. A burnt mound, known in Irish archaeology as a fulacht fiadh, is typically a horseshoe-shaped mound of heat-shattered stone and charred material, the debris left behind after repeated cycles of heating stones in fire and plunging them into water-filled troughs. They are among the most common prehistoric monument types in Ireland, yet this one in Toor offers a quietly unsettling version of the type: recorded, named, and yet invisible.
Local knowledge describes an area of broken and burnt stone roughly fifteen metres across, which came to light during land reclamation work. When inspectors visited the site, however, nothing was visible at ground level. The proximity to a well is worth noting. Burnt mounds are almost always found near water sources, since the entire process depended on a reliable water supply, whether for cooking, hide-working, bathing, or some combination of uses that prehistorians continue to debate. That association with a well here, on a sloped pasture field, fits the pattern precisely, even if the stones themselves have been scattered, buried, or removed during the reclamation that first brought them to attention.
