Cairn, Carrowneden, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Cairns
In the townland of Carrowneden, in County Mayo, a cairn sits in the landscape, largely unrecorded in any publicly accessible form.
A cairn, in the Irish archaeological sense, is typically a mound of heaped stones raised over a burial or used to mark a significant point in the terrain, and they range from modest field clearances to elaborate Neolithic passage tombs. Which category this particular example falls into remains, for the moment, an open question.
Carrowneden lies in a part of Mayo with no shortage of prehistoric activity. The wider county contains some of Ireland's most significant megalithic landscapes, and stray cairns in rural townlands often turn out to have considerable antiquity when properly examined. Without detailed records available in the public domain, the specifics of this site, its dimensions, its construction, its relationship to surrounding field systems or other monuments, remain obscure. That obscurity is itself quietly telling. Many such sites were noted in early surveys, marked on maps, and then left to accumulate decades of silence while the surrounding land changed around them.