Midden, An Geata Mór, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
Along the coastline near An Geata Mór in County Mayo, there survives a midden, one of the oldest and most direct forms of archaeological evidence left by human communities.
A midden is, in its simplest terms, a rubbish heap, specifically one composed of discarded shells, animal bones, ash, and domestic debris accumulated by people over generations. That description may sound unglamorous, but middens are among the most revealing features an archaeologist can encounter. The layered contents can indicate diet, season of occupation, trade connections, and the passage of time with a precision that grander monuments rarely offer.
The west Mayo coastline has long attracted human settlement, drawn by the productivity of its inshore waters and the relative shelter of its inlets and bays. Shell middens in particular are common along the Atlantic fringe of Ireland, many of them dating to the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods, when communities relied heavily on shellfish, especially limpets, periwinkles, and oysters, as a reliable seasonal food source. The specific site at An Geata Mór is a formally recorded monument, recognised as part of the archaeological landscape of this part of Mayo, though detailed documentation for this particular example remains limited at present.