Earthwork, Tankardstown, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ritual/Ceremonial
A circular discolouration in the soil or grass, visible only from the air and only on a single November day in 1984, is all that places this site on the archaeological record.
The earthwork at Tankardstown, County Limerick, exists less as a monument than as a question mark pressed into the landscape, its entry in the national inventory carrying the candid verdict: doubtful antiquity.
The site came to notice during an aerial survey conducted on 3 November 1984, as part of work associated with the Bórd Gáis Éireann Curraleigh West-Limerick gas pipeline. Cropmarks, which are the faint differences in soil colour or vegetation growth that betray buried features to a camera overhead, showed what appeared to be a roughly circular form at this location, logged as potential site number 040242. It sits in rough wet pasture to the south of a pair of features tentatively identified as barrows, the low earthen mounds associated with prehistoric burial. The site was never marked on Ordnance Survey historic maps, and by the time orthophotography was taken between 2005 and 2012, nothing was visible at ground level. Google Earth imagery tells a similar story of blank pasture, save for a relic field boundary running northwest to southeast, a faint crease in the land suggesting some earlier pattern of enclosure or land use. The 1897 edition of the 25-inch Ordnance Survey map records a well somewhere in this area, though its relationship to any potential archaeology is unclear.
There is, in practical terms, very little for a visitor to see. The site lies in wet, rough grazing land with no surface remains and no public access infrastructure. Its interest is really of a different kind; it raises the question of how much of the Irish countryside quietly holds features that only a particular angle of winter light, or a long dry summer that stresses the grass unevenly, will ever reveal. Compiled by Fiona Rooney and uploaded to the national record in May 2021, the entry itself is a small document of archaeological uncertainty, honest about what is known and what remains unresolved.