Burnt spread, Nunstown, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In a waterlogged pasture in Nunstown, County Kerry, a roughly eight-metre spread of burnt material sits quietly in the ground, about twenty-five metres south of the Douglasha stream.
It is not dramatic to look at, and that is rather the point. Sites like this tend to go unnoticed precisely because they leave so little above the surface, yet they are among the more telling traces of prehistoric activity in the Irish landscape.
The burnt spread belongs to a cluster of related features in the immediate area. Approximately a hundred metres to the east lies another burnt spread, and a similar distance to the west sits what may be a fulacht fia, the term used for a type of prehistoric cooking site, typically identified by a mound of fire-cracked stone left over from repeatedly heating rocks and plunging them into a water trough. A possible enclosure has also been recorded about thirty metres to the south-southeast. The presence of natural springs and poorly drained ground in this part of Nunstown is unlikely to be coincidental. Fulacht fia sites cluster around wet, low-lying areas, and the ready availability of water was central to however these places functioned, whether for cooking, processing hides, or other activities that archaeologists continue to debate. What the Nunstown spread represents on its own is harder to say with certainty, but its proximity to the other features suggests it is part of a broader pattern of use rather than an isolated incident of burning.
