Enclosure, Oldtowndonore, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Enclosures
Somewhere beneath a field in Oldtowndonore, Co. Kildare, lies the ghost of a circular enclosure that only the right conditions can coax into view. It leaves no visible mark on the landscape, no raised bank or hollow, nothing a passing walker would notice. Its existence is known almost entirely because of a single aerial photograph, taken on a summer's day in 2018, when the cropmarks happened to be legible.
Cropmarks form when buried features such as ditches, walls, or banks influence how vegetation grows above them. Soil that once filled an ancient ditch tends to retain more moisture, producing lusher, taller crops in a dry season; conversely, buried stone or compacted ground can stunt growth. From above, these subtle variations in colour and height can trace the outlines of structures that have otherwise vanished entirely. The circular enclosure at Oldtowndonore belongs to a category of site common across Ireland, where ring-shaped earthworks once served as farmsteads, settlement boundaries, or ceremonial spaces, often dating from the early medieval period, though enclosures of this form span a wide range of periods and purposes. What makes this particular example notable is its fragility as a piece of evidence: visible in a Google Earth image from 28 June 2018, it did not appear at all in a comparable Digital Globe photograph of the same area, suggesting that the window in which such a site declares itself can be extremely narrow, dependent on the precise timing of drought, crop type, and growth stage.