Enclosure, Ballycarran Little, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Enclosures
There is an enclosure at Ballycarran Little, in County Kilkenny, that no one walking across it would ever know was there.
Sitting on the flat flood plain of the River Nore, within reclaimed grassland that offers long views along and across the valley, the site leaves no trace at ground level. No earthwork, no raised edge, no dip in the soil. It exists, visually speaking, only from the air.
What revealed it was a cropmark, photographed on 10 July 1973 as part of the Cambridge University Collection of Aerial Photography. Cropmarks form when buried features, whether walls, ditches, or pits, affect the moisture and nutrients available to the plants growing above them, causing subtle differences in crop colour and height that become legible only when seen from altitude, and often only during dry spells when the contrast is sharpest. In the 1973 photograph, the enclosure resolves into a rectilinear, roughly square outline, approximately 30 metres to a side. That shape, regular and deliberate, points to human construction, though the notes do not specify a period or function. Rectilinear enclosures of this kind can span a broad range of dates and uses, from early medieval farmsteads to features associated with later land management, and without excavation the Ballycarran Little example cannot be pinned down further.
The site is not marked or signposted, and there is nothing to see from the ground. Its interest is almost entirely conceptual: the knowledge that somewhere beneath an ordinary patch of riverside grassland, a squared boundary was once dug or built, used, and then buried so completely that only an aerial camera, at the right angle, in the right season, happened to catch its outline before it faded back into the plain.