Field boundary, Owenbeg, Co. Sligo

Co. Sligo |

Ritual/Ceremonial

Field boundary, Owenbeg, Co. Sligo

In the blanket bog at Owenbeg, County Sligo, twelve stones are doing their best to disappear.

They sit in a rough north-south line on a slight rise of drier ground, most of them barely breaking the surface of the heather and sedge. Two reach a height of thirty centimetres; the rest are almost entirely swallowed. Together they stretch for somewhere between fifteen and sixteen metres, with wide gaps between them, and they may, or may not, be the remnant of a field wall.

The qualification matters. The site was recorded as a field system as far back as 1995, but that designation arrived without explanation or supporting description, and when the ground was finally inspected in 2014, the picture turned out to be considerably more ambiguous. What was found was a single, gapped line of low stones on a gently elevated patch of ground, sloping away to the west into wetter bog. No evidence of anything more extensive came to light. The surrounding landscape is itself a kind of slow archive: old turf cuttings run throughout the area, and small-scale machine harvesting continues in parts, the kind of incremental working of the bog that has gone on across the west of Ireland for generations. Whether the stones predate that activity, or relate to it in some way, or represent something older altogether, remains genuinely open.

That uncertainty is, in its own way, the point. Blanket bog is among the most effective preservers of early agricultural remains in Ireland, capable of holding field walls, wooden trackways, and even entire pre-bog landscapes beneath its surface. The Céide Fields in north Mayo, buried under thousands of years of peat, are the most celebrated example. Owenbeg offers nothing so dramatic, just a few stones on slightly higher ground, barely visible, their purpose unconfirmed. But the restraint of the archaeological record here is itself informative: not every line of stones resolves into a story, and not every entry in the record turns out to be what it was first thought to be.

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Pete F
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