Post row - peatland, Cartronlebagh, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the bogland of Cartronlebagh, County Longford, a line of wooden posts runs through the peat, aligned along a NNW-ESE axis.
Posts like these, preserved in waterlogged conditions that would destroy timber elsewhere within decades, can survive for thousands of years in the anaerobic environment of a raised bog. What they once supported, marked out, or guided people along remains an open question.
The row was recorded during a field survey in 1989, noted by B. Raftery, one of Ireland's foremost authorities on prehistoric wetland archaeology. Such post alignments found in peatlands across Ireland and Britain have been interpreted in various ways: as the structural remains of trackways or platforms, as boundary markers, or occasionally as features whose purpose has no obvious parallel in the archaeological record. Without further excavation or dating, the Cartronlebagh posts sit in that category of discoveries that are carefully logged and quietly left to the bog, their full significance deferred rather than resolved.