Platform - peatland, Corragarrow, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the boglands of Corragarrow, County Longford, a small arrangement of ancient timber emerged not through deliberate excavation but through the industrial grinding of a peat milling machine.
The exposed area measured less than a metre across in either direction, yet what it revealed was a fragment of a wooden platform, the kind of structure that bogs across Ireland have preserved for centuries or millennia beneath their waterlogged, oxygen-poor layers.
When the site was recorded in 1999, six substantial roundwood timbers were visible, laid parallel to one another lengthways, each between six and nine centimetres in diameter. Two smaller pieces of brushwood, around five centimetres across, accompanied them on the eastern side of the exposed section. A peatland platform of this type would typically have served as a stable working or walking surface over soft, yielding ground, the wooden elements laid down to distribute weight and prevent sinking. What is quietly remarkable here is the absence of any visible evidence of woodworking on the timbers. The roundwoods appear to have been used more or less as they came, unshaped by axe or adze, which may say something about the practical urgency of the original construction or simply about the materials that were close to hand. Because the structure came to light only as milling cut through the peat, the full extent of the platform remains unknown, with the recorded exposure representing little more than an accidental glimpse of something much larger, or possibly much smaller, lying beneath.