Enclosure, Cappauniac, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Enclosures
Beneath a field of pasture grass near the River Aherlow in County Tipperary, there is a circle roughly thirty metres across that nobody walking the land would ever notice.
It shows no ridge, no dip, no scatter of stone. The only reason anyone knows it exists at all is that, seen from the air, the buried outline causes crops above it to grow at a slightly different rate, producing what is known as a cropmark, a ghostly ring visible in aerial photography but invisible at ground level.
The enclosure at Cappauniac came to light through an Air Corps aerial photograph, reference V.311/2968-9, which captured the circular cropmark in the gently undulating terrain about forty metres south of the Aherlow. Cropmarks of this kind typically indicate a buried ditch or foundation, the remnant of a circular enclosure of the sort that would once have defined a farmstead or small settlement, often dating to the early medieval period in Ireland. The surrounding landscape has its own quiet geometry: a low ridge running east to west, parallel to the river, meets a higher ridge angled to the north-east and south-west. The enclosure sits within that arrangement of ridges, though whether its builders chose the location deliberately with that topography in mind is something the aerial photograph alone cannot answer.