Cave, Ballynacourty, Co. Waterford

Co. Waterford |

Caves & Shelters

Cave, Ballynacourty, Co. Waterford

Somewhere in the Cappagh valley in County Waterford, the Douglas River does something quietly remarkable: it disappears. Running on a north-west to south-east course, the river reaches a point where it simply goes underground, vanishing into the karst geology beneath the surface. Close to this spot lies a cave set within a quarry known locally as Quinlan's quarry, a place whose ordinariness as a working extraction site conceals a more unsettling history.

At some point during quarrying operations, human remains came to light within the cave. Those bones are now held by the National Museum of Ireland, which routinely takes custody of archaeological human material recovered from sites across the country. The precise circumstances of their discovery, their age, and how many individuals they represent are not recorded here, but the fact of their removal to a national collection suggests they were considered significant enough to preserve rather than discard. Caves in Ireland have long served as places of burial, shelter, and ritual, sometimes across multiple periods, and a cave sitting beside a river that plunges underground would have carried its own particular character in the minds of earlier inhabitants.

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