Ring-ditch, Ballyboher, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
Beneath the fields of Ballyboher, Co. Wexford, a circular ditch roughly fifteen metres across lies completely invisible at ground level.
It only gives itself away from the air, where differences in soil moisture and crop growth betray the outline of a ring-ditch, a type of prehistoric feature typically associated with burial monuments or ritual enclosures, in which a circular trench was cut into the earth and later filled, leaving a deposit that causes the vegetation above it to grow and colour differently from the surrounding ground. This particular example sits inside a larger rectangular enclosure, a pairing that hints at a landscape used and reused across multiple periods.
The ring-ditch came to light through aerial photography, a discipline that has quietly transformed the understanding of Irish archaeology since the mid-twentieth century. Cropmarks of this kind are most legible during dry summers, when stressed vegetation over buried features contrasts sharply with the surrounding crop. The site appears on several runs of aerial photographs, and was captured again in July 2018 by a drone-mounted camera operated by Páid Bates of Skypix Aerial Works, confirming that the feature remains legible to modern survey methods. The ground itself sits on fairly level terrain, which would have made it a practical location for any community making use of this part of Co. Wexford in prehistory.