2.5 MB - The Heritage Council
Transcription
2.5 MB - The Heritage Council
Neolithic and Bronze Age Landscapes of North Mayo: Report 2011 Edited by Seamas Caulfield, Gretta Byrne, Noel Dunne and Graeme Warren NOT FOR PUBLICATION www.ucd.ie/archaeology/nbnm2011 INSTAR2 Neolithic and Bronze Age Landscapes of North Mayo: 2011 Report Seamas Caulfield, Gretta Byrne, Noel Dunne and Graeme Warren (eds) And reports from Meriel McClatchie, Emmett O’Keeffe and Helen Roche Not for public circulation December 2011 i Table of Contents Introduction................................................................................................... 1 Work Packages One and Two ................................................................................................................. 2 Work Package Three ............................................................................................................................... 3 Part One: Specialist Reports Creating Digital Archaeological Landscapes: An archaeological GIS for the NBNM project, by Emmett O’Keeffe. ............................................................. 5 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 5 Aims ........................................................................................................................................................ 5 Datasets .................................................................................................................................................. 6 Results ..................................................................................................................................................... 7 Outputs ................................................................................................................................................. 12 Radiocarbon Dating ..................................................................................... 13 Charcoal analysis from Neolithic and Bronze Age landscapes of North Mayo, by Lorna O’Donnell ...................................................................................... 21 Introduction .......................................................................................................................................... 21 Sampling strategy.................................................................................................................................. 21 Methodology......................................................................................................................................... 21 Results ................................................................................................................................................... 23 Glenulra enclosure E24 Middle Neolithic ............................................................................................. 24 Glenulra Scatter 92E140 Middle Neolithic............................................................................................ 25 Céide Visitor Centre (E494) Late Neolithic/Early Bronze Age ............................................................... 26 Belderg Beg E109 Early/Middle Bronze Age ......................................................................................... 28 Rathlackan E580 Early/Middle Neolithic to Early Bronze Age. ............................................................. 36 ii Discussion.............................................................................................................................................. 41 Summary ............................................................................................................................................... 46 Acknowledgements:.............................................................................................................................. 46 References ............................................................................................................................................ 47 Analysis of non-wood plant macro-remains, by Meriel McClatchie .............. 84 Introduction .......................................................................................................................................... 84 Methodology......................................................................................................................................... 84 Plant macro-remains recorded ............................................................................................................. 84 Discussion.............................................................................................................................................. 89 Recommendation for retention/deaccessioning .................................................................................. 92 Conclusions ........................................................................................................................................... 92 References ............................................................................................................................................ 93 Part Two: Draft Chapters Soils and Geology, by Graeme Warren ......................................................... 97 Geology ................................................................................................................................................. 97 Deglaciation and sea level change ...................................................................................................... 100 Sea level .................................................................................................... 101 River processes ................................................................................................................................... 102 Soils ..................................................................................................................................................... 102 References .......................................................................................................................................... 105 History of Archaeological and Related Research in North Mayo, by Seamas Caulfield .................................................................................................... 106 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................ 106 Archaeological Research ..................................................................................................................... 107 The Belderrig Valley Research: Belderg Beg Excavations. .................................................................. 110 iii Scientific Research associated with the Archaeological Projects. ...................................................... 112 The North Mayo Research and the Public .......................................................................................... 113 New Research and Researchers .......................................................................................................... 115 Bibliography ........................................................................................................................................ 116 Probed Surveys: Erris, Céide Fields and Belderg More, by Seamas Caulfield .................................................................................................................. 117 Traditional Turf Cutting in North Mayo .............................................................................................. 117 The Erris Survey................................................................................................................................... 118 The Céide Fields Survey ...................................................................................................................... 119 Belderrig Valley: The Belderg More Survey ....................................................................................... 121 Survey on the Glenamoy – Bartnatra Peninsula, by Noel Dunne ................ 123 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................ 123 Study Area ........................................................................................................................................... 123 Megalithic tombs, cists and stone circles ........................................................................................... 126 Prehistoric boundaries ........................................................................................................................ 130 Prehistoric settlements ....................................................................................................................... 137 Overall prehistoric settlement areas and voids .................................................................................. 139 Bibliography ........................................................................................................................................ 142 Survey from Ballinglen to Rathfran Bay, by Gretta Byrne ........................... 143 Research Outline and Methodology ................................................................................................... 143 Field Walls ........................................................................................................................................... 144 Associated Structures ......................................................................................................................... 149 Discussion............................................................................................................................................ 151 References .......................................................................................................................................... 154 iv Acknowledgments This report is the product of many years of work, from many different people, far too numerous to name here. The projects summarised by the NBNM project here, over the years, have received funding from many different sources – indeed, the projects summarised offer in many senses a history of Irish archaeology and the availability of funding, from emergency labour schemes through to varied research grants. Where specific funding has been provided for particular projects these are discussed in text. The contribution of volunteer labour, especially that of students, to the success of the projects over the long term should also be noted. The Neolithic and Bronze Age Landscapes of North Mayo project has been supported by INSTAR and INSTAR2 in 2009-2011, following a pilot in 2008 supported by the Heritage Council’s unpublished excavations scheme. We are extremely grateful for this support, without which it would not have been possible to develop the project and to be as close to final publication of this material as we now are. v Introduction This report reviews the work carried out as part of the Neolithic and Bronze Age Landscapes of North Mayo (NBNM) project in 2011. The NBNM project will bring to final publication critically important aspects of the Neolithic and Bronze Age archaeology of North County Mayo, specifically Caulfield’s survey and excavation in Belderrig; survey/excavation by varied parties at ‘Céide Fields’; Byrne’s survey and excavation at Rathlackan and Dunne’s survey work in Pollatomas. The buried landscapes of the Céide Fields are iconic for Irish archaeology, of international significance and were included on the Irish tentative list of World Heritage Sites. According to this designation the Céide Fields and associated landscapes have ‘outstanding universal value’: “The significance of the Céide Fields lies in the fact that along with their associated megalithic monuments and dwelling structures they provide a unique farmed landscape from Neolithic times. Not only are they "an outstanding example" but they are the outstanding example of human settlement, land‐use and interaction with environment in Neolithic times. The first adoption of farming occurred at different times throughout the world. Nowhere else is there such extensive physical remains of a Neolithic farmed landscape surviving from this significant period in prehistory.” (http://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/5524/: original emphasis) The current project extends the success of the Céide Fields work in outreach and attempts to remedy the lack of full academic publication of this material, which is recognized as of international significance. Our initial proposed model for the project has been a three year project resulting in: - an academic monograph detailing the results of survey, excavation and further specialist work carried out in the region - a book targeted at the general public outlining the nature, significance and future of these archaeological landscapes Two phases of work with INSTAR funding have been completed to date following a preliminary phase in 2008, supported by the Heritage Council’s unpublished excavations grant; in 2009 registers for artefacts and samples and stratigraphic reports were generated. In 2010 specialist analyses of artefacts and assessments of environmental data were undertaken, along with some illustration of artefacts and C14 dating. Digitising of extant plans was undertaken and a robust spatial framework provided for same. In 2011 we made a minor modification to our proposed timeline, recognising the considerable complexity of some of the sites. We proposed to complete substantial components of the final volume, including full reports on the excavations at and near the main part of the Céide Fields complex – the area immediately surrounding the Céide Fields Visitor Centre (‘Céide Hil). In 2012 we will complete the reports for Belderg Beg and Rathlackan and finalise synthesis and interpretation. We are providing two reports for INSTAR. This document collates all draft texts and reports produced this year – it is not intended for public consumption. It is accompanied by a substantial report on the excavations at Céide Hill which can be published on line. 1 Fe br ua ry M arc h April May June July Aug ust Sept Oct Nov Dec Work Package One: staffing Student volunteers ‐digitising/processing, fieldsurvey registering grants/contracts Research assistant: provision of illustrations, distribution maps (Four Months, PT) Work Package Two: eco‐fact anaylsis Specialist reports C 14 dating Work Package Three: final chapters Survey: Céide Fields and Belderrig Survey: Rathalackan and area Survey: Pollatomas and area Behy Glenulra Enclosure Céide Fields Visitor Centre Glenula Scatter Soils, Geology etc. History of Research Draft of popular text Work Package Three: dissemination Ongoing Work Package Four: reporting for INSTAR Reporting requirements Figure 1: Indicative work plan for NBNM2011 as presented in initial proposal Work Packages One and Two Five main bodies of work have been carried out in order to support the final production of texts: charcoal analysis (Dr Lorna O’Donnell), non-wood plant macrofossils analysis (Dr Meriel McClatchie), GIS work (Emmett O’Keeffe), the provision of radiocarbon dates and, finally, artefact illustration. Full reports on the first four of these are included here, with illustrations used in the reports as appropriate. - Charcoal Analysis, by Lorna O’Donnell Plant remains, by Meriel McClatchie GIS and Spatial Archive, by Emmett O’Keeffe 2 - A summary of the radiocarbon dating programme, by Graeme Warren Work Package Three Substantial drafts of final chapters have been produced for all the areas noted above. Some sections are final and will be made publically available, others will require editing in the context of the final volume as a whole and we would not wish these to be public at this stage. We include all of these drafts here. This includes: - A background to soils and geology, by Graeme Warren A History of Research in North Mayo, by Seamas Caulfield Survey work at Céide Fields and Belderrig, by Seamas Caulfield Survey work at the Glenamoy – Bartnatra Peninsula, by Noel Dunne Survey work at Ballinglen to Palmerstown River, by Gretta Byrne Excavations at Behy Court tomb 1963-4 and 1969, by Sean Ó Nualláin, Madeline Murray, and Graeme Warren Excavations at Glenulra Enclosure 1970-1972, by Seamas Caulfield and Graeme Warren Excavations associated with the construction of the Céide Fields Visitor Centre 1989-1993, by Gretta Byrne, Noel Dunne and Graeme Warren Excavations at the Glenulra Scatter, by Gretta Byrne: this now incorporated into the Visitor Centre report. Where a chapter is not ready for publication at this stage a paragraph at the start of the chapter summarises the work required for completion. The four excavation reports are not included here; these have been combined with a further text providing an outline model of chronology for the Céide Hill sub-system. This is ready to be made available to the public as the first synthetic publication of the results of 40 years of archaeological excavations on Céide Hill. Caulfield and Downes continue to work on a draft of popular text. Many of the sections outlined above, especially those by Caulfield, will be used in the more popular account of A Landscape Fossilised. 3 Part One: reports on specialist work 4 Creating Digital Archaeological Landscapes: An archaeological GIS for the NBNM project. Emmett O’Keeffe, UCD School of Archaeology Introduction This report outlines the construction of a GIS for digitally managing and analysing the spatial component of the NBNM archive. The report introduces the aims and methodology of the GIS component before outlining the main foci and outcomes of work. Aims The general aim of the GIS component of the NBNM project is to digitise the paper archive of four decades of research on the prehistoric landscapes of North Mayo. This paper archive includes large and small-scale plans of sub-peat and extant fieldwall survey, plans of excavation cuttings from a number of excavations of prehistoric sites and detailed mid- and post-ex plans from a number of excavations. The GIS portion of the NBNM project has focused on the digitisation of the paper archive; the georectification of all relevant plans; the digitisation of the majority of these plans; the integration of these with other relevant landscape datasets and the production of outputs. The paper archive consists of 347 drawings, of these, 288 were scanned as part of Phase 1 with the remainder being scanned as part of phase 2. These drawings are from a variety of sources such as original primary drawings, excavation reports and MA theses (Byrne 1986, Dunne 1985). These drawings vary in source type and consist mainly of: pencil drawings on permatrace, inked drawings on permatrace, pencil drawings on paper, digitally printed or photocopied drawings. The original size of these drawings can vary quite considerably from extremely large sheets of permatrace representing landscape-scale plans of sub-peat fieldwalls to A4 sized plans of numerous excavation trenches from a variety of archaeological sites. A methodology was devised to include all relevant drawings within one integrated GIS to allow a series of analytical and representative options in the future. The scanning methodology established during phase 1 of the GIS project has been continued. All image scans are monochrome lineart or greyscale, decisions on the most suitable selection were made on a case by case basis to produce the clearest images possible from the original paper archive. A standard scanning resolution of 400 dpi was used and was increased for 80 images when deemed necessary. All images were saved as .tiff format. Scanned images are organized into folders by date of scanning and all images follow the nomenclature ‘Scan_###_sitename.tif’, for example, ‘Scan_025_Rathlackan.tif’. One of the key goals of this project has been the georeferencing of plans of both regional fieldwall surveys and excavations. Georeferencing an image ties that image into a spatial framework so that it can be accurately plotted within a framework such as the Irish National Grid. A series of images, representing the key foci for this project have been georectified. These vary from regional sub-peat fieldwall plans to plans of individual excavation trenches. This georectification forms the basis for all digitising work undertaken. Due to the diverse generation methods of the paper archive and the variation between different projects and different spatial scales a number of methods have been used to georectify images relating to different geographic foci. 5 Figure 1: student volunteers played a very significant role in digitising plans from excavations A tiered file structure is used for all data within the project (Figure 2). This tiered file structure for archaeological data follows the path: NBNM GIS > Archaeological_data > Regional_landscape_name > and is then divided into subfolders containing data relating to spatial information and digitised shapefiles. Each digitised shapefile is contained within a folder relating to the specific scanned image and the spatial location of that image, for example the particular excavation trench of a particular archaeological site. The exception to this being the images and shapefiles of fieldwalls which are contained within the folder path: Archaeological_data > Regional_survey >. As an example the digitised shapefile for a mid-excavation plan (scanned as image 022) of cutting B at Rathlackan would be NBNM GIS > Archaeological_data > Rathlackan_Ballinglen_landscape > shapefiles > cutting_b > mid_ex > scan_022. This file structure is replicated within the organsiation of the GIS layers. Datasets Key datasets have been constructed on the basis of the paper archive. These datasets are composed mostly of shapefiles outlining features evident on both survey and excavation plans. Where features (fieldwalls, excavation trenches, structural stones, spreads etc.) have been digitised each category of feature has normally been given its own shapefile per digitised scan. Where necessary created shapefiles have been given a variety of additional attributes (for instance where stones on an excavation plan relate to different construction features) to allow more nuanced querying and display of data. In addition a number of databases of small scale have been constructed to aid in displaying key sites and features at a variety of spatial scales and to aid in spatially defining key georectification anchors. 6 Figure 2: Data Model for NBNM GIS Results Regional Survey All surveyed and identified sub-peat prehistoric fieldwalls have been georectified and digitised. The original paper archive contains a wide range of paper plans at a variety of scales for different parts of the sub-peat field systems of north Mayo. A variety of methods have been used in this programme of georectification including the undertaking of recent high-grade GPS survey, the relation of features (such as the boundaries of modern settlement as represented on the paper plans with) with georectified aerial photographs and site visits. The level of spatial accuracy of the fieldwall georectification varies across the region and in places, such as around the Céide Fields visitor’s centre it is accurate to within 3 metres. However, the level of accuracy may drop in places (such as around Ballyknock Hill) to approximately 10-15 metres due to the georectification method for fieldwalls in these areas. A series of structures identified as part of Gretta Byrnes survey of eastern north Mayo have been georectified and digitised using co-ordinates derived from 1:2,500 OS maps. These structures have then been overlaid on regional fieldwall maps and their accuracy demonstrated. However, due to variation in the spatial accuracy of the north Mayo fieldwalls a statement of error in the region of 510 metres is estimated for these structures. 7 Figure 3: survey work at Céide Fields, identifying key wall junctions to be probed and reidentified in advance of GPS survey. Behy Court Tomb Plans of Behy court tomb which outline: the overall post-excavation extent of the tomb; and some architectural detail of the chambers, the location of identified archaeological features and positions of profile lines have been georectified on the basis of co-ordinates derived from recent high-grade GPS survey. Given the method of georectification of these plans their spatial accuracy is of a high degree (<1 metre). Céide Fields Visitors Centre The locations of excavation trenches from a series of phases of excavation around the Céide Fields Visitor’s Centre have been georectified using a combination of spatially fixed paper plans and recent GPS survey. In all 109 separate excavation trenches have been spatially fixed. Each excavation cutting has been assigned (within the GIS shapefile) additional attributes such as excavation phase to allow a more nuanced display and to increase their usability in the future. The locations of individual cuttings are visible on the aerial photographs for the area around the Céide Fields visitor’s centre and when overlaid with the cutting shapefiles demonstrate the high degree (<1 metre) of spatial accuracy for the locations of these trenches. 8 Figure 4: example of outputs at Céide Fields Visitor Centre: all excavation trenches from 39 years of excavation: red –Behy (1963-1964, 1969); yellow - Glenulra Enclosure (1970-1972); blue excavations in advance of the visitor centre (1989-1992) Excavation plans were available in the archive for fifteen individual trenches, some demonstrating different phases of excavation, and all of these have been digitised. Belderg Beg Trench locations for a series of excavation seasons at Belderg Beg have been georectified using a combination of composite base plans, aerial photographs, high-grade GPS survey and site visits. The majority of excavation trench locations have been positively identified during fieldwork and accurately mapped (<1 metre) within the GIS. The current spatial fix for some of these identifiable excavation trenches is a significant improvement on their previous spatial accuracy. During fieldwork it was not possible to identify a number of trench locations represented on composite base plans from the paper archive. Their locations have however, been retained within the GIS and these trenches have been identified and displayed differently. Whilst some small amounts of digitising remain to be completed for Belderg Beg, the vast majority of this work has been completed including the digitising of plans for the Bronze Age roundhouse (Area B) and the ‘Area F’ excavation trench (10,353 individual stones were digitised in Area F alone). Ongoing digitising will continue to utilise student volunteers. 9 Figure 5: Belderg Beg, Area F: example of GIS Glenulra Enclosure A composite base plan from a series of survey episodes (most recently by the UCD School of Archaeology MA class) representing the major archaeological features of Glenulra enclosure has been georectified and digitised. This georectification was undertaken using a composite of paper base plans and recent high-grade GPS survey. Cross-checking with aerial photographs and multiple episodes of GPS survey demonstrates a high-level of spatial accuracy (<1 metre) for the enclosure. Glenulra Scatter A post-excavation plan for Glenulra scatter has been georectified and digitised. This plan was georectified on the from paper base plans demonstrating the location of the site in relation to the sub-peat field systems. As the field systems in this area have been georectified without the immediately local use of high-grade GPS the georectification error of Glenulra scatter must be regarded as possibly being in the order of 10-15 metres. Figure 6: MA students carrying out drawn and GPS survey at Glenulra Enclosure: March 2011 10 Rathlackan As a result of a lack of GPS survey points for the excavations at Rathlackan the base-plan for the site has been georeferenced using values derived from the OSI online mapping service and translated from ITM to NGR values. Following subsequent cross-checking against 1 metre resolution aerial photographs an error of 5-10 metres must be taken into account for the Rathlackan excavation base plan. A total of forty-four excavation plans from twelve separate cuttings have been georectified and the vast majority of these have been digitised. As the base plan was used to georectify each of the plans for the individual excavation cuttings the error of 5-10 metres is systematic and all plans are internally consistent. The error could be corrected easily in the future by using high-grade survey. Additional Datasets A series of additional datasets derived from a number of contexts (SMR, EPA, GSI etc.) have been incorporated into the GIS. This data has been simplified and displayed at a variety of scales to allow outputs of value to the NBNM project. Figure X shows the relationship of fieldwalls, megalithic monuments as recorded in the SMR and land use. This clearly demonstrates that fieldwalls do not survive in areas of modern cultivation (green) although monuments do. The presence of both fieldwalls and monuments in areas of bog (brown) suggests that walls and megaliths should be found together and this implies that fieldwalls once covered the land suitable for cultivation as well. In passing it should be noted that the SMR locations are not accurate for many monuments and that, regardless of the errors noted above for the fieldwalls, they are more accurately located than most of the SMR sites. Figure 7: Land use and the survival of different aspects of the Neoltihic and Bronze Age Landscapes of North Mayo 11 Landscape Modelling Aerial photographs (1 metre resolution) and map-derived elevation data (50 metre resolution) provided by Mayo County Council have been used as background display and analysis data within the GIS. These datasets have also been used to created draped 3D digital landscape models of North Mayo to which various aspects of the archaeological record have been added (such as the sub-peat field systems). The elevation data has also been used to generate a series of coarse resolution landscape models of viewsheds, aspects, slopes etc. Figure 8: 3D view of Ballyknock ( on left) and main Céide Fields Complex, looking South South West. 2x vertical exaggeration. Outputs A series of 2D plans moving in scale from the entire extent of the north Mayo sub-peat field systems to individual excavation trenches have been produced. A series of short movies examining aspects of the north Mayo sub-peat fieldwalls have been produced from the 3D landscape models. The key output of this part of the NBNM project is the GIS itself which forms the basis for future data management and output production. The GIS including all digitised data and outputs is currently 54 gigabytes and represents a significant archive for past research on the prehistoric archaeology of north Mayo and a basis for future endeavours. 12 Radiocarbon Dating A further tranche of radiocarbon dates were obtained in 2011. These are reported below, alongside all archaeological C14 dates for the sites. Full discussion will take place in the appropriate final reports. 13 Céide Visitor Centre F.56 39 UCD-0268 25 F.56 UCD-0271 25 F.56 UCD-0272 UCD-0267 Cal Date (2 sigma) 25 Error - C14 UB-18598 Context 19 Species Sample No Feature No Cutting Lab Number GrN-20032 Plough mark 2390 40 750 - 380 cal BC Betula sp. Charcoal layer site of Building 3672 30 2139 - 1957 cal BC 37 bulk charcoal Charcoal layer site of Building 3660 50 2200 - 1890 cal BC 38 bulk charcoal Charcoal layer site of Building 3800 50 2460 - 2040 cal BC 10 B 35B bulk charcoal Hearth 3835 50 2470 - 2140 cal BC 10 B 35A bulk charcoal Hearth 3840 50 2470 - 2140 cal BC UB-18597 10B 35 Corylus avellana hearth (? Charcoal spread?) 3815 31 2434 - 2131 cal UBA-16460 C F.3 3 Charcoal spread 3774 34 2296 - 2126 cal BC UB-18596 H F.11 18 Betula ‐charcoal burnt organic layer 3722 31 2203- 2030 cal BC UCD-0269 H F.9 21 bulk charcoal Charcoal spread 3600 50 2140 - 1770 cal BC UCD-0270 H F.9 11 bulk charcoal Charcoal spread 3650 50 2200 - 1890 cal BC Betula ‐charcoal Charcoal spread 3852 27 2459 - 2207 cal BC fill of shallow trench 3791 28 2332-2137 cal BC fill of ash pit, sealed by F9 4111 48 2873 - 2501 cal BC UBA-16675 H F.9 16 UB-18595 H F.13 13 UBA-16461 H F.15 S.19 Betula sp. Ilex aquifolium Maloideae ‐charcoal 14 RATHLACKAN Material Dated 60 2880-2490 cal BC F.6 Hearth of house 4040 60 2870-2450 cal BC Beta-76590 F.103 4130 80 2900-2490 cal BC Beta-76586 F.30 3630 80 2210-1750 cal BC Beta-76584 F.31 3640 80 2300-1750 cal BC Beta-76585 F.44 4090 70 2880-2480 cal BC Beta-76588 F.58 Slit in top of socket in SW end Chamber 3 With secondary pottery in Chamber 3 With secondary pottery in Chamber 3 Deposit in N end of CH 3 above basal stones Spread in Ch3 4640 80 3650-3100 cal BC UBA-16467 F.95 S.69 Layer in Ch.3 corylus ‐charcoal 4674 25 3617 - 3370 cal BC UBA-16466 F.87 S.67 Layer in Ch.3 corylus ‐charcoal 4685 26 3625 - 3371 cal BC UBA-18600 F.65 S.71 layer in Ch. 2 Fill of pit in Chamber 3 Corylus avellana 4655 43 3625 - 3356 cal BC corylus – charcoal 3655 28 2134 - 1945 cal BC 4390 240 3700-2300 cal BC 4121 31 2867 - 2579 cal BC 4559 25 3483-3110 cal BC 4110 90 2890-2470 cal BC 4520 80 3500-2900 cal BC 4641 25 3514 - 3361 cal BC S.50 Beta-76589 F.66 F.66 UBA-18599 F.66 S.64 Fill of pit in Chamber 3 UBA-16462 S.14 Spread on court surface Beta-76583 F.21 F.21 Beta-76587 F.21 UBA-16465 F.78 Fill of pit in Chamber 3 Salix sp. corylus – shell Spread on court surface Spread on court surface S.73 Stakehole in court corylus ‐shell 15 Error UBA-16463 Cal Range (95.4%) 4110 Beta-63836 C14 Hearth of house Context F no F.6 S. No Lab Number Beta-48102 F.68 S.61 F. 107 S.75 UBA-16677 black layer surrounding hearth stone in court Thin layer of material under hearth in court corylus ‐shell corylus – charcoal 16 Cal Range (95.4%) UBA-16464 Error Deposit surrounding hearth in court C14 Material Dated Context F no F.68 S. No Lab Number Beta-76591 4570 90 3650-3000 cal BC 4600 27 3498 - 3141 cal BC 4449 26 3333 - 3014 cal BC GLENULRA ENCLOSURE Notes charcoal spread/hearth Cal BC (95.4% prob.) betula charcoal Error F4 BP uncal Description UBA-16676 Material Sample Cutting Lab Code bulk charcoal SI-1464 4460 115 3510 - 2880 cal BC possibly C.127 4616 possibly C.127 24 3498 - 3352 cal BC 17 BELDERG BEG Cal BC (95.4% prob.) Error BP uncal Description Material Sample Cutting Lab Code AREA A UBA-18594 A1 alnus charcoal from exterior EN vessel 3604 32 UBA-18591 A1 Betula charcoal adhering to quern stone 3753 28 SI – 1475 A2 bulk charcoal Charcoal associated with a flint scatter at in Area A2 2905 75 1370 - 900 cal BC UBA‐16672 A2 S.096 horn (bovid) horn artefact 3482 42 1908 - 1691 cal BC UBA‐16673 A2 S.097 horn (bovid) horn 2567 24 804 - 594 cal BC QL-1689 A1 tree root, site A1 1630 30 340 - 540 cal AD QL-1690 A1 charcoal site A1 3800 30 2350 - 2130 cal BC bulk charcoal Charcoal within the roundhouse associated with artefacts 2295 75 750 - 100 cal BC s.002 2110 - 1885 cal BC 2281 - 2040 cal BC AREA B: house SI – 1474 B1 UBA‐16670 B1 S.242 corylus – charcoal Charcoal sample from wall trench of Phase 1 round house: possible structural wattle (C.109) 3077 25 1415 - 1271 cal BC UBA‐16669 B1 S.201 Salix ‐charcoal Charcoal sample from wall trench of Phase 1 round house: possible structural wattle (C.109) 3117 23 1441 - 1316 cal BC SI – 1473 B1 Burnt block of wood from post hole of porch of phase 2/3 roundhouse. 3170 85 1640 - 1210 cal BC 18 Cal BC (95.4% prob.) Error BP uncal Description Material Sample Cutting Lab Code AREA B: cultivation and charcoal GU-11268 B (?) basal peat Sample BB1: basal peat 2450 35 760 - 400 cal BC GU-11269 B (?) basal peat Sample BB2: basal peat 2730 40 980 - 800 cal BC UBA‐16671 B2A S.253 corylus – charcoal Charcoal sample, predates ard cultivation 3707 45 2272 - 1959 cal BC UBA-18593 B2P West B2T East s.322 betula 3536 29 s.235 salix sp. 3621 27 1948 - 1769 cal BC 2114 - 1898 cal BC UBA-18592 AREA C: fence posts UBA‐16674 C1 SI- 1472 S.294 quercus ‐wooden fence post From pointed oak stake/post along line of the wall built on the peat 3546 46 2018 - 1750 cal BC C1 quercus ‐wooden fence post From pointed oak stake/post along line of the wall built on the peat 3210 85 1690 - 1290 cal BC SI - 1471 C1 quercus ‐wooden fence post From pointed oak stake/post along line of the wall built on the peat 3220 85 1700 - 1300 cal BC QL-1688 C1 quercus ‐wooden fence post From pointed oak stake/post along line of the wall built on the peat 3300 30 1670-1500 cal BC 19 TREES Cal BC (95.4% prob.) Error BP uncal Description Material Cutting Lab Code UBA‐16468 Belderg Beg pinus ‐wood tree 4437 25 3327 - 2934 cal BC SI-1470 Belderg Beg pinus ‐wood tree 4220 95 3080 - 2490 cal BC UBA‐16469 Geevraun pinus ‐wood tree 4026 24 2618 - 2474 cal BC UCD-C47 Geevraun pinus ‐wood tree 4210 60 2920 - 2610 cal BC UBA‐16470 Belderg More pinus ‐wood tree 4531 30 3361 - 3103 cal BC UCD-C49 Belderg More pinus ‐wood tree 4580 60 3520 - 3090 cal BC 20 Charcoal analysis from Neolithic and Bronze Age landscapes of North Mayo, Lorna O’Donnell Introduction Charcoal is the product of chemical reactions that occur when wood is heated (i.e. thermal decomposition) (Smart and Hoffman 1988, 172). It is frequently found on Irish archaeological sites, in general in greater quantities than plant remains. Its uses in environmental archaeology range from being a suitable material for radiocarbon dating, to an environmental indicator. This report describes the analysis of wood and charcoal samples from five sites in the Céide fields complex Co. Mayo, excavated by Prof. Seamas Caulfield, Ms Gretta Byrne and Mr. Noel Dunne. During the excavations, bulk samples were taken for future environmental work. Current funding under the INSTAR grant scheme by the Heritage Council has allowed for processing and analysis of these samples. Previously, some charcoal analysis was undertaken by Mr. Donal Synott from the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin. In 2010, the author was asked to assess samples from five of the sites; Glenulra enclosure (E24) (Caulfield et al 2009a), Glenulra Scatter (92E140) (Byrne et al 2009a), Céide Visitor Centre (E494) (Byrne et al 2009b), Belderg Beg (E109) (Caulfield et al 2009b) and Rathlackan (E580) (Byrne et al 2009c) (O’Donnell 2010). Following this assessment and further sample processing, 82 samples were selected for full analysis from the five sites. The aims of the work are as follows: Assess suitable short lived material for radiocarbon dating Examine any wood selection strategies on the sites Compare woodland flora over time, incorporating other environmental data Sampling strategy The sampling strategy on site consisted mainly of targeted sampling of charcoal rich deposits. Methodology Processing Soil samples were processed in 2009-2010 by means of flotation. Mechanical flotation tanks were used. This involved the agitation of the soil sample in a water filled tank lined with a 1mm nylon mesh. This releases the lighter environmental material (flot) such as seeds and charcoal from the soil matrix. This lighter fraction is collected in a sieve of 300μm mesh size. Once dry, the retent was sorted using a stack of sieves with a mesh size of 4mm, 2mm and 1mm. Charcoal larger than 2mm in size was sorted out of the retent and the flot, all seeds 21 are extracted and any finds (bone, pottery, flint and other such archaeological material) are also sorted from the retent. All material retrieved from residue-sorting was recorded. Charcoal identification Each piece of charcoal was examined and orientated first under low magnification (10x-40x). They were then broken to reveal their transverse, tangential and longitudinal surfaces. Pieces were mounted in plasticine, and examined under a metallurgical microscope with dark ground light and magnifications generally of 20x and 40x. Wood identification Each wood piece was identified by a first selection under a binocular microscope at a magnification of 10x-40x. This was used to discern features such as ring growth or insect channels. Samples one cell thick was taken with a razor blade from the transverse, radial and tangential planes of the wood. Analysis of thin sections was completed under a transmitted light microscope, at magnifications of 10x, 20x and 40x. Each taxon or species will have anatomical characteristics that are particular to them, and these are identified by comparing their relevant characteristics to keys (Schweingruber 1978; Hather 2000 and Wheeler et al 1989) and a reference collection supplied by the National Botanical Gardens of Ireland, Glasnevin. Details of charcoal recording The general age group of each taxa per sample was recorded, and the growth rates were classified as slow, medium, fast or mixed. Any ring widths were measured using electronic calipers. The ring curvature of the pieces was also noted – for example weakly curved annual rings suggest the use of trunks or larger branches, while strongly curved annual rings indicate the burning of smaller branches or trees (Figure. 1). Tyloses in vessels in species such as oak can denote the presence of heartwood. These occur when adjacent parenchyma cells penetrate the vessel walls (via the pitting) effectively blocking the vessels (Gale 2003, 37). Insect infestation is usually denoted by round holes, and is considered to be caused by burrowing insects. Their presence normally suggests the use of decayed degraded wood, which may have been gathered from the woodland floor or may have been stockpiled. Short lived twigs with strongly curved annual rings were selected for radiocarbon dating. Figure. 1 Ring curvature. Weakly curved rings indicate the use of trunks or large branches. (Marguerie and Hunot 2007, p.1421). 22 Results Overall charcoal 83 samples from five sites were fully analysed. 4196 charcoal fragments were identified, including thirteen wood taxa. The main trees present are birch (Betula sp.), oak (Quercus sp.), hazel (Corylus avellana) and alder (Alnus sp.). Other wood taxa include ash (Fraxinus sp.), ivy (Hedera helix), holly (Ilex aquifolium), pomaceous fruitwood (Maloideae), pine (Pinus sp.), willow (Salix sp.) yew (Taxus baccata), elm (Ulmus sp.) and alder/hazel (Alnus/Corylus) (Figure 2, Table 1). Oak and willow were also identified from waterlogged wood samples from Belderg Beg. Salix 7.4% Taxus 0.0% Ulmus 0.1% Alnus Alnus 15.5% Betula Corylus Quercus 23.7% Corylus/Alnus Fraxinus Hedera Betula 25.8% Pinus 0.1% Maloideae 1.6% Corylus/Alnus 0.0% Maloideae Pinus Quercus Ilex 2.7% Hedera 0.1% Ilex Salix Taxus Corylus 22.7% Ulmus Fraxinus 0.3% Figure 2 Total charcoal results from the five sites: N=4196 fragments Alnus 650 Betula 1082 Corylus 954 Corylus/Alnus 1 Fraxinus 13 Hedera 3 Ilex 114 23 Maloideae 66 Pinus 3 Quercus 994 Salix 309 Taxus 1 Ulmus 6 Table 1 Total charcoal fragments from the five sites Glenulra enclosure E24 Middle Neolithic Charcoal was examined from S004, the fill of a hearth (contextual information taken from the sample bag). Birch, oak, pine and yew were identified from this sample (Figure 3). Ring counts range between two and four. Annual rings on the birch are strongly curved, indicating branches. In contrast, both the oak and pine annual rings are weakly curved, suggesting they were derived from larger branches or trunks. The presence of tyloses coupled with the weakly curved annual rings in the oak suggests that heartwood was burnt. Growth rates are medium (Table 2). 3% 39% Betula Pinus Quercus Taxus 55% 3% Figure 3 Total charcoal from E24 : N= 33 fragments 24 Glenulra Scatter 92E140 Middle Neolithic Charcoal was recorded from two contexts from this site, a charcoal rich spread (F6) (S005) and a stakehole (F8) (S009) (Table 3). Five wood taxa were identified, the main tree present is hazel. Mainly hazel along with low levels of willow, pomaceous fruitwood, oak, and birch were identified from the charcoal spread (F6). The level of charcoal within the posthole fill (F8) is low. Two pieces of hazel and one fragment of pomaceous fruitwood were recorded from here. The low level of charcoal within the posthole indicates that it was not burnt in situ but more likely the post decayed or was removed. Charcoal present could be the results of on site domestic burning. Annual ring counts range between two and ten from Glenulra. All of the pieces are of medium growth and have strongly curved annual rings, indicating that branches or twigs were burnt. 2% 5% 2% 5% Betula Corylus Maloideae Quercus Salix 86% Figure 4 Charcoal identifications from 92E140: N=41fragments 25 Céide Visitor Centre (E494) Late Neolithic/Early Bronze Age Charcoal was examined from nine contexts from this site (Table 4). Seven wood taxa in total were identified including oak, birch, hazel/alder, pomaceous fruitwood, willow, hazel and holly. The main tree present is birch (Figure 5). 3% 9% 3% 2% Betula 0% Corylus Corylus/Alnus 16% Ilex Maloideae Quercus 67% Salix Figure 5 Total charcoal identifications from E494 : N=462 fragments Birch, hazel and willow were recorded from Cutting C F3 (S003). In comparison, mainly birch with holly, pomaceous fruitwood, oak and willow were identified from Cutting H, F9 (S016) a comparable charcoal layer. From Cutting 10B (S035), a hearth, mainly hazel along with willow and oak were identified. Previous work by Donal Synott of the Botanical Gardens in Glasnevin has also identified these taxa, along with holly and alder. Primarily birch, hazel and holly were recorded from Cutting H ‘Trench’ F13 (S013), while birch, pomaceous fruitwood and willow were noted from Cutting H ‘Trench’ F14 (S022). Two fills were examined from Cutting H, F19, an ash pit. F15 (S019) is the upper fill and it contains birch, hazel, pomaceous fruitwood, hazel/alder, oak and willow. Below this, F16 (S029) an ashy layer was excavated, no charcoal was recorded in this sample. Birch, holly, pomaceous fruitwood, oak and willow were identified from Cutting H ‘Trench’ F20 (S026). 26 Oak and birch were recorded from Cutting H, F24C (S028), the fill of a stakehole. The low level of charcoal indicates that the post was not burnt in situ. From Cutting 25, F56 (S039), a charcoal layer, birch, hazel, pomaceous fruitwood, oak and willow were identified. fragment count Annual ring counts range from 1 to 26 from the Céide visitor centre site. All of the fragments have strongly curved annual rings suggesting the burning of branches or twigs with the exception of oak from F9, F24C and F10B which has weakly curved rings. Growth is medium in most cases, with the exception of birch from 24C which has a faster rate of growth. In the author’s experience, willow and birch often have faster rates of annual growth than other frequently identified Irish taxa such as hazel and alder. 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Salix Quercus Maloideae Ilex Corylus/Alnus CTG C F3 CTG 10B CTG H F9 CTG H F13 CTG H F14 CTG H F15 CTG H F20 Charcoal Trench Charcoal Trench rich soil rich soil Trench Ash pit Trench CTG H F24C CTG H F56 Posthole Charcoal layer Figure 6 Charcoal from different contexts E494: N=462 Most of the samples are derived from Cutting H, with the exception of F3 (Cutting C) F56 (Cutting 25) and Cutting 10B. The results are very homogenous, birch dominates all the contexts with the exception of Cutting 10B which contains mainly hazel (Figure 6). Hazel is also important in F24C, although this must be interpreted with caution, as only six fragments in total were identified from the context. When the results are phased through time period, it is clear that hazel and willow both play a larger role in the Early Bronze Age identifications than during the Later Neolithic (Figure 7). F24C is dated tentatively to the Early Bronze Age through association, the high levels of birch are comparable to both the Later Neolithic samples (F15) and the Early Bronze Age ones (F3, 9, 13, 14 and 20). 27 Corylus Betula 100% 90% fragment count 80% Salix 70% Quercus 60% Maloideae 50% Ilex 40% Corylus/Alnus 30% Corylus 20% Betula 10% 0% L Neo EBA Figure 7 Phased identifications from E494 : N= 367 (L Neo = 47, EBA = 320). Belderg Beg E109 Early/Middle Bronze Age Charcoal was analysed from 48 samples from Belderg Beg (Table 5). A further thirteen samples were assessed but not selected for analysis (Table 6). Ten wood taxa were identified from the site; the results are dominated by oak, birch, alder and hazel (Figure 8). 5.6% 21.9% Alnus Betula Corylus 26.6% Fraxinus Hedera Ilex 0.0% Maloideae 1.2% 24.4% Pinus Quercus Salix 2.5% 17.3% 0.1% 0.4% Figure 8 Total charcoal identifications E109 : N= 2933 28 35 no of samples 30 25 20 15 10 5 Sa lix Q ue rc us nu s Pi al oi de ae M I le x He de ra Fr ax in us s Co ry lu Be tu la Al nu s 0 Figure 9 No of samples each taxa occurred in Birch was identified in 30 samples along with alder. Oak was noted in 29, while hazel was recorded in 27 samples. These four main taxa were clearly frequently used across the site. Willow was noted in 19, while holly was identified in 17. The rest of the taxa were identified in 8 or less samples (Figure 9). From Glenulra enclosure (E24), Glenulra Scatter (92E140), Céide Visitor Centre (E494) and Rathlackan (E580) a sub-sample of 100 fragments was identified from each sample, following recommendations from British sites (Keepax 1988, 200). Recent research from the author has indicated that in prehistoric Irish sites, given our more limited floristic diversity than Britain, it is suitable to analyse 80 fragments per sample (O’Donnell 2011, 56). Saturation curves of when new taxa occurred were examined from Belderg Beg. From S319, the last new species identified was holly at fragment 27 (Figure 10a). In comparison, the last new species recorded from S324 was hazel and fragment 40 (Figure 10b). From S332, holly was the last new species recorded at fragment 14 (Figure 10c). Based on these cumulative frequency curves and previous research, it was aimed to identify 80 fragments from each sample from Belderg Beg. The reason that this methodology was not applied to the other sites is because they have a low number of samples and in the case of Rathlackan a low level of charcoal generally. Therefore if present a sub-sample of 100 fragments was analysed from these samples or if this number of fragments was not present, all identifiable pieces were identified. 29 new taxa occurrence 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 80 100 120 80 100 120 fragment count Figure 10a Saturation curve S319 new taxa occurrence 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 20 40 60 fragment count Figure 10b Saturation curve S324 new taxa occurrence 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 20 40 60 fragment count Figure 10c Saturation curve S332 30 Area A A long length of Neolithic field wall and some associated features were identified from here, which was located in the very centre of the site. The charcoal spreads, cattle horn, and a range of other deposits seem to primarily date to the Early Bronze Age but include Iron Age dates. A small alder branch was located adhering to pot (find no). Some birch charcoal was identified adhering to a quern (S. 002). A mixture of mainly oak, with hazel, birch and ivy was noted from a shallow area near a pit (S. 019). Underlying a brown habitation layer, oak only was identified from S. 022, which may indicate some structural remains. Mainly oak, hazel and birch, along with pine and alder were identified from a charcoal spread (S. 035). A charcoal spread in trench 1 contained birch, hazel, ivy and oak (S.027). A further charcoal spread from this area contained mainly alder and birch (S.040). A hazel branch was analysed which was found in association with a horn (S096). 25 fragments were identified, the ring width pattern indicate that these are all from the one branch. Nine annual rings were counted on this roundwood. A high level of insect holes was present indicating that the branch was quite degraded and insect ridden before it was burnt (Plate 1).This may represent a hazel handle element which was fixed to the horn. Plate 1 Insect holes from charcoal S096 31 Area B Area B is located at the north east corner of the site and included the remains of a substantial roundhouse (Caulfield et al 2009b, 10). The house may have three phases, although clearly identifying which structural features date to which phase is problematic. A variety of wood taxa including birch, hazel, ash, holly, pomaceous fruitwood, oak and willow were identified from S. 200, taken from a pit under flat stones. Alder, birch, hazel and willow were all noted from S. 205, which was sampled under small stones around the sill stone. Alder, hazel, oak and willow were identified from a sample amongst stones (S234). A charcoal spread in trench B2A contained alder, birch, hazel, oak and willow (S.253). 100% fragment count 80% Salix Quercus 60% Maloideae Ilex Corylus 40% Betula Alnus 20% 0% 201 213 226 238 241 242 255 254 Figure 11 Charcoal samples from constructional elements at E109 : N=457 Charcoal was identified from seven samples taken from the wall trench (Figure 11). Hazel is the principal species in four of the samples (238, 241, 242, 254) indicating that it may be the remains of wattle burnt in situ. In contrast, other samples from the wall trench (S201 and S213) are composed of a mixture of pomaceous fruitwood and willow which could also represent in situ wattle burning. A sample from a further foundation trench (S226) is also dominated by hazel, while alder only was identified from posthole S255. This may be the remains of an alder post burnt in situ. In comparison to S255, a sample of burnt timbers (S236) was identified as alder only, suggesting it may have been used in construction also. Well preserved roundwoods were observed in S242. It was possible in one instance to measure the ring widths on a hazel roundwood which is 22mm in diameter (Plate 2). This 32 piece was 17 years old when cut, bark still remains. Ring width measurements indicate that the roundwood had medium to fast rate of growth for the first few years of its life, particularly in rings 2-6 (from the pith outwards, yellow arrow). Subsequently, growth declines (Figure 12a). The fastest rate of growth is 2.2mm per annum in Year 2. It may be that the tree was in a stand of other hazel trees of similar age, which then had to compete for light and nutrients as the shoots grew together. Plate 2 Hazel roundwood from S242 E109 33 Growth of hazel S242 2.5 growth (mm) 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 years Figure 12A Oak and willow were identified from under the stone setting of a central flag (S246), while oak only was identified beneath central flagging (S247). A sample of flint was noted to contain burnt wood, which was identified as alder, birch, ash, holly, oak and willow (S252). A sample of burnt wood was taken from the entrance trench (to the roundhouse?) oak only was identified from this, indicating some sort of a structural element (S272). A sample from between the upper and lower level of paving stones contained mainly alder, along with pomaceous fruitwood and willow (S900). 100% Salix fragment count 80% Quercus Maloideae 60% Ilex Fraxinus 40% Corylus Betula 20% Alnus S3 19 S3 B2 20 P S3 B2 21 P S3 B2 22 P S3 B2 23 P S3 B2 24 P S3 BT 25 P S3 B2 26 P S3 B2 27 P S3 B2 28 P S3 B2 29 P S3 B2 30 P S3 B2 31 P S3 B2 32 P S9 B2 01 P S9 B2 02 P S2 B2P 35 S2 B2 56 T S2 B2 58 T S2 B2 57 T S2 B2 77 T B2 T 0% Figure 13 Charcoal from midden contexts B2P & B2T Two discrete midden deposits were excavated at Belderg Beg, B2P and B2T. Both have been independently dated to the Early Bronze Age. Charcoal was identified from sixteen contexts 34 relating to midden B2P and from five contexts relating to middle B2T. Figure 13 demonstrates that almost all of the B2P contexts have a very homogenous mix of birch and alder (with the exception of S328). This is quite different from the samples from B2T, which mainly contain oak and hazel. The charcoal data does not indicate that B2P and B2T are the same deposit. Annual ring counts range from 2-33 in the Belderg beg samples. Ring curvature is a mixture between strongly and weakly curved, indicating the burning of a range of sized material. Growth is medium to mixed. Wood results Twenty wooden posts were examined from Belderg Beg which had been preserved through waterlogging. Subsequent drying of the wood made it difficult to record any detail except the wood taxa. Fifteen of these were identified as oak, including samples 293, 295, 296 and 297 from Cutting C (Table 7). It is likely that these timbers represent fence posts and possibly building material. Oak is a strong and durable material, therefore it is unsurprising that it was selected for building at Belderg Beg. One willow post was also identified (S1151). fragment count 100% 90% Salix 80% Quercus 70% Pinus 60% Maloideae 50% Ilex 40% Hedera 30% Fraxinus 20% Corylus 10% Betula 0% Alnus EBA MBA Figure 14 Phased charcoal identifications from Belderg Beg : N= 2928 fragments (EBA 1904, MBA 1024). When the charcoal data from the Early and the Middle Bronze Age are compared from Belderg Beg, the levels of birch are higher during the Early Bronze Age. 705 fragments of birch were identified from the Early Bronze Age, while only 9 were identified from Middle Bronze Age samples. This is influenced by the high birch levels from the midden layer B2P. Alder and oak are common during the two time periods. Both hazel and willow are more 35 important during the Middle Bronze Age than the preceding period. Willow increases importance during the Middle Bronze Age. Samples 19, 22, 27, 35 and 40 from cutting A1 are not directly dated to the Early Bronze Age, rather they are dated by association. These were included in the overall counts for Figure 14. When these samples are removed from the Early Bronze Age counts and compared with the directly Early Bronze Age charcoal samples, some differences are evident. This is mainly demonstrated by the higher levels of oak and lower birch counts in the associated contexts (Figure 15). fragment count 100% 90% Salix 80% Quercus 70% Pinus 60% Maloideae 50% Ilex 40% Hedera 30% Fraxinus 20% Corylus 10% Betula 0% Alnus EBA dated through association EBA directly dated Figure 15 Charcoal from Early Bronze Age contexts only Rathlackan E580 Early/Middle Neolithic to Early Bronze Age. Charcoal was identified from twenty four samples from Rathlackan (Table 8). A further eleven samples were assessed and not selected for analysis (Table 9). Overall the level of charcoal is low. Nine wood taxa were identified, including hazel, holly, pomaceous fruitwood, pine, oak, willow, elm, alder and birch. The results are dominated by hazel, oak and willow (Figure 16). 36 1% 6% 1% Corylus Ilex 14% Maloideae Pinus 47% Quercus Salix Ulmus 25% Alnus 0% Betula 4% 2% Figure 16 Total charcoal identifications from E580 : N= 727 25 sample occurrance 20 15 10 5 0 Corylus Ilex Maloideae Pinus Quercus Salix Ulmus Alnus Betula Figure 17 Sample occurrence E580 As well as representing the highest fragment counts, hazel was identified in most (21 of the 24) samples from the site. Oak was the next most frequently recorded (13 samples) along with birch (12 samples), willow (11 samples) and pomaceous fruitwood (8 samples) (Figure 17). Other taxa were identified in 4 or less samples. The discussion follows the stratigraphic report (Byrne et al 2009c). 37 Features within the court Cutting C Samples were assessed from three main types of features within the court, layers, a pit fill and stakehole fills. Samples from five layers were examined (F21 S014, f64 S048, F68 S061, F97 S060, and F107 S075 (Figure 18). 100% 90% fragment count 80% 70% Salix 60% Quercus 50% Maloideae 40% Corylus 30% Betula 20% 10% 0% F21 F64 F68 F97 F107 Figure 18 Charcoal from layers within the court A low level of charcoal was observed within F21 and F107. Hazel was identified from both samples, while willow was noted in F21 and pomaceous fruitwood in F107. In contrast F64, F68 and F97 are more charcoal rich. These three layers were all found in an area very close to the centre of the court (Byrne et al 2009c, 12). The uppermost was F64, a small dark charcoal rich deposit. This was underlain by a flat hearth stone (F71). F68 was a large spread of burnt black soil which surrounded the hearthstone. F71, a thin layer of grey black sandy silt underlay the hearthstone. The results from F64 and F68 are quite similar, both are dominated by hazel. Willow and birch were identified from both features also. Oak was also identified from F64, and pomaceous fruitwood from F68. Oak only was identified from F97. These fragments were generally weakly curved, with tyloses indicating the burning of heartwood. The presence of only oak from F97 may indicate that it was the remains of a structural oak plank or some form of wooden foundation which may have burnt in situ. One fragment of willow and two of hazel were recorded from a pit fill, F93 (S063). Forty stakeholes were located within the court. Charcoal was identified from three of these (F40 S031, F41 S032 and F78 S073) (Figure 19). The main wood taxa identified from these contexts are hazel. The low level of charcoal present, however, makes it unlikely that these 38 posts burnt in situ. Rather the post could have decayed or been removed and subsequently infilled with charcoal from on site burning processes. 100% 90% fragment count 80% 70% Quercus 60% Maloideae 50% Corylus 40% Betula 30% Alnus 20% 10% 0% F40 F41 F78 Figure 19 Charcoal from stakeholes within the court The Rear chamber Cutting F Charcoal was identified from eight layers within the rear chamber (F30 S036, F31 S022 and S038, F33 S034, F49 S042, F58 S045, F63 S047, F87 S066 and S067, F95 S069 (Figure 20). The main taxa within this chamber are hazel, birch, oak and willow. fragment count Charcoal from layers within the rear chamber 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Ulmus Salix Quercus Pinus Maloideae Ilex Corylus Betula F30 EBA F31 EBA F44 LN F49 E/MN F58 E/MN Figure 20 Charcoal from layers within the rear chamber 39 F63 E/MN F87 E/MN F95 E/MN Alnus The Middle Chamber Cutting H Charcoal was examined from a layer of brown organic material with pottery inclusions from the Middle Chamber, F65. A low level of oak only was identified from this context. Rathlackan enclosure Immediately to the east of the enclosure wall, a spread of charcoal rich material F27 was excavated. Mainly hazel followed by willow, with some birch and oak were identified from here. The court walls One sample (S059) was examined from F56, a curvilinear slot trench which appears to have held the edging side of a kerb (Byrne et al 2009c, 11). A low level of charcoal was identified from here (only six fragments) including oak, birch, hazel and alder. Square building foundation (Cutting B). A dense charcoal spread was located within the centre of the structure. Charcoal from this is composed mainly of hazel roundwoods, with pith and bark still attached. Up to 20 annual rings were counted on the pieces. A low level of birch was also identified from this context. This is primary evidence of burning on the site, and indicates that hazel branches were preferred for this function. 100% Ilex fragment count 80% Ulmus Salix 60% Quercus Maloideae 40% Corylus Betula 20% Alnus 0% E/MN MN LN EBA Figure 21 Phased charcoal identifications E580: N=352 (E/MN 91, MN 31, LN 126, EBA 104) 40 When the charcoal is examined through different time periods, it is clear that hazel dominates the Neolithic samples, while the picture of woodlands during the Early Bronze Age is quite different, being dominated by willow and elm (Figure 21). Annual ring counts range from 1 to 20 in the Rathlackan material. Growth is medium, with instances also of fast and slow growth. The fragments are mainly strongly curved, with some weakly curved annual rings indicating the use of larger branches or trunks. Discussion It is generally assumed that fuel and wood will be gathered from as close to the site as possible (Shackleton and Prins 1992) and therefore archaeological charcoal can reflect the surrounding environment. There are of course problems with this principle, such as particular species may have been selected over others and there are issues with charcoal fragmentation. Yet, for the purposes of environmental reconstruction, charcoal can be used to provide a floristic background to archaeological sites, particularly when integrated with other environmental data. It is impossible to know, however, how close to or far away from a site wood was gathered. 100% Ulmus 90% Taxus Salix fragment count 80% Quercus 70% Pinus 60% Maloideae 50% Ilex 40% Hedera 30% Fraxinus 20% Corylus/Alnus 10% Corylus 0% Betula E24 921E40 E494 E109 E580 Alnus Figure 22 Comparison of charcoal data from all sites: N= 4195 The Middle Neolithic Glenulra scatter (92E140) and Neolithic/Early Bronze Age Rathlackan (E580) sites are similar in the high levels of hazel (Figure 22). More oak is evident in Rathlackan than Glenulra, however. In contrast, both the Middle Neolithic Glenulra scatter (E24) and the Late Neolithic/Early Bronze Age Céide visitor centre (E494) are dominated by birch. The levels of oak are low within the Céide visitor centre while they are important in the Glenulra enclosure. The highest number of fragments was identified from Belderg Beg 41 (E109). This is the only site on which alder is an important taxa and probably underlines the wetland nature of the area. Birch, oak and hazel were also important from this site. The roundhouse at Belderg Beg was made from oak posts, preserved by waterlogging (Caulfield et al 2009b). Possible hazel, willow and pomaceous burnt wattle was also identified from Belderg Beg. Hazel was burnt in varying degrees on all sites with the exception of Glenulra. It will frequently be found growing in association with oak. It is a medium sized, deciduous tree, and can reach a height of 15m. It will grow on a wide range of soils, including limestone, mildly acid soils and clays (Lipscombe and Stokes 2008, 102). Hazelnut shells dominated the plant remains assemblage from Rathlackan, in comparison to the high levels of hazel wood burnt on the site. No plant remains were evident in the samples from Glenulra scatter, which had similar high percentages of hazel charcoal to Rathlackan (Mc Clatchie 2010). The tree can re-generate rapidly and thus can be an indicator for secondary woodland expansion (O’Connell and Molloy 2001, 104). It is likely that local oak woodlands did grow in the vicinity, possibly on the upland slopes, although continued presence of light dependent wood taxa does not indicate closed canopy oak woodlands. It has the most importance on Glenulra, Rathlackan and Belderg Beg, indeed it was used for building at the latter site. There are two native Irish oaks, and they cannot be separated by wood anatomy. The two species will grow in quite different habitats. The pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) will usually grow on heavy, lowland soils, where it will also tolerate flooding. In contrast, the sessile oak (Quercus petraea) will grow on less fertile, acidic soils. Oaks can reach a height of 40 metres and live for 1,000 years or more (Hickie 2002, 60). Pedunculate oak grows up to 25m high and can attain a girth of 9m. Sessile oak can grow up to 40m high, and can reach a girth of 13m. Both trees can live up to 500 years (Stuijts 2005, 142). The importance of birch in the overall charcoal assemblage (25.8%) and its role in all sites (except the Glenulra scatter) is interesting and unusual from a charcoal perspective. A considerable impact on birch is evident at approximately 3890+-60BP, the switch from birch to grasses may be indicative of increased pastoral farming (Molloy and O’Connell 1995, 220221). It is not possible to separate silver birch (Betula pendula) and downy birch (Betula pubescens) through wood anatomy. Silver birch prefers dry conditions and will grow well on light, dry soils (Lipscombe and Stokes 2008, 140), in contrast, however, the downy birch prefers wetter conditions and will grow on poorly drained soils (Lipscombe and Stokes 2008, 178). It is likely that birch grew on shallow peat and in areas that were peat free (O’Connell and Molloy 2001, 101) the species identified represents downy birch. Two of the main wetland indicators from archaeological charcoal are willow and alder. Willow was frequently identified at Rathlackan, Belderg Beg and Ceide. It was also identified 42 at Glenulra scatter. Alder was identified only at Belderg Beg, where it was important and at Rathlackan where it was less so (22% and 1% respectively). Both these trees indicate the presence of streams, mire or carr woodland. Ireland’s native tree is the black or grey alder (Alnus glutinosa). It can often be seen growing on mire sufaces, alongside rivers, lakes, in marshes or in fens. A consistent and abundant supply of moisture is essential for its germination and early growth. The tree can grow up to 25m, and can attain a maximum girth of up to 1m. The tree can reach ages of between eighty and one hundred years (Stuijts 2005, 139). Willows are not naturally a woodland species, although shrubby growth may occur under light woodland cover. All willows favour wet conditions, and it may be a pioneer species on wet soils (Orme and Coles 1985, 10). A hint of scrub is noted from all of the sites with the exception of Glenulra (E24) with the identification of pomaceous fruitwood (Maloideae). The Maloideae group, a sub family of the Rosaceae includes crab apple, wild pear, rowan/whitebeam and hawthorn. It is extremely difficult to separate these through wood anatomy. Crab apple (Malus sylvestris) tends to be found on woodland edges (Hickie 2002, 55). Wild pear (Pyrus pyraster) is mostly found as an isolated tree (Stuijts 2005). Rowan (Sorbus aucuparia) is a tough colonizer which can tolerate peaty soils and exposed conditions. It needs plenty of light to thrive (Hickie 2002, 65). Whitebeam (Sorbus aria) grows up to 20m high and has a preference for limestone soils (Orme and Coles 1985, 11). Hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) can thrive in all but the most acid of soils (Gale and Cutler 2000). As wild pear is not a native Irish species, it is likely that the charcoal represents other types encompassed in the Maloideae group. A possible endocarp (core) fragment of (crab-apple) was identified from C. 93 in Rathlackan (Mc Clatchie 2010, 2), which may indicate that the Maloideae charcoal identified from that site represents apple wood. Pine was noted on Glenulra, Belderg Beg and Rathlackan. It prefers light, sandy soils, and does not like sea winds or high rainfall. However, it can tolerate these conditions and therefore grow on marginal land (Hickie 2002, 66). A comprehensive programme of radiocarbon dating has been undertaken on bog pines from the Céide fields (Caulfield 1998). A pine horizon developed in the area over 100 years, centered on 4150 BP (4700 cal. B.P.) (Molloy and O’Connell 1995). In general, pine grew on the bog basin before the Neolithic period but appears to have either no longer grown by the Neolithic period or to have been present in very low amounts (O’Connell and Molloy 2001, 104-105). This is probably why only three fragments were identified from the whole charcoal assemblage, still it does demonstrate the trees presence (albeit sparse) into the Bronze Age. Some other canopy trees identified from the charcoal assemblage include holly, yew and elm. Holly was identified at the Ceide Visitor Centre, Belderg Beg and Rathlackan. Both yew and elm were identified on one site only, Glenulra and Rathlackan respectively. Holly is a hardy tree and can be found on higher, exposed ground or growing underneath taller forest 43 trees forming understorey (Hickie 2002, 59). Yew is an evergreen conifer that grows up to 20 metres. Older trees often divide into several distinct trunks. It prefers well-drained and sheltered sites (Hickie 2002, 78).Elm trees will grow well on rich, alluvial soils and do prefer riverine habitats (Gale and Cutler 2000, 264). The low levels of ash are interesting from both the pollen and charcoal results. Ash trees prefer moist, well drained and fertile soils (Lipscombe and Stokes 2008, 188). Given the mineral soils in Belderg Beg are sandy and poor (Verrill and Tipping 2010, 1018) the soil may not have been suitable in the area for its growth. Charcoal identifications indicate different woodland types were being utilised, most likely close to the sites. Canopy woodland is evident with oak, elm and holly. It is unlikely that this woodland was closed canopy in nature, as light dependant shrub species such as pomaceous fruitwood, hazel and birch were frequently identified. Nearby streams, rivers or bogland could have supported wet or carr woodland and were most likely composed of alder and willow. Ulmus 100% Taxus Salix fragment count 80% Quercus Pinus 60% Maloideae Ilex 40% Hedera Fraxinus 20% Corylus/Alnus Corylus 0% Betula E/MN MN LN EBA MBA Alnus Figure 23 Phased charcoal identifications from all sites N= 3721 (E/MN 91, MN 105, LN 173, EBA 2328, MBA 1024) Charcoal from the combined Céide sites provides the opportunity to examine woodland use in Mayo from the Mesolithic period to the Middle Bronze Age. When the results are compared by time period (Figure 23), hazel is very important during the Neolithic period. Oak and birch were also frequently used during these times. Oak and hazel are often the dominant species from Irish Neolithic sites, for example from an Early Neolithic hut site at Sonnagh II, Co. Mayo (E3344) (O’Carroll forthcoming). As time progresses through the Middle Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age, birch was increasingly burnt as fuel and must have 44 been freely available in the area. This is actually reflected in a dip in birch values at the start of the Early Bronze Age (Molloy and O’Connell 1995). Hazel is more important during the Middle Bronze Age than the preceding Early Bronze Age period. High values for alder are only evident during the Early and Middle Bronze Age. When compared to charcoal data from the nearby Mesolithic/Neolithic site of Belderrig, the results are comparable in the high levels of oak and hazel (Figure 24). In contrast, birch was not important at Belderrig, while the levels of pomaceous fruitwood are higher at Belderrig than at the Céide complex. Taxus 100% Salix 90% Quercus fragment count 80% Prunus spinosa 70% Prunus avium 60% Prunus 50% Pinus 40% Maloideae 30% Ilex 20% Fraxinus 10% Corylus 0% Betula 1 (LM) 2a (LM/EN)) 2b (LM/EN) 3 (MN/LN) Alnus Figure 24 Charcoal results from Belderrig (04E0893): N=540 Neolithic landscape Evidently the field systems were cleared for use during the Neolithic, but both the pollen and charcoal data suggest that a mosaic of different woodlands grew in the local vicinity. The lack of clear dominance of oak charcoal, along with light demanding taxa such as hazel and birch in both the pollen and charcoal all indicate that these woodlands were not closed canopy in nature (Verrill and Tipping 2010, 1017). Tree pollen from the Neolithic period in Belderg is dominated by Alnus, which is likely to have grown on the mire surface (Verrill and Tipping 2010, 1015). The pollen indicates that down slope of the archaeological site at Belderg Beg (E109) a shallow marsh developed during the Neolithic, with a complex mosaic of vegetation growing around it, including grassland, woodland and heath taxa (Verrill and Tipping 2010, 1017). This contrasts with the charcoal results, from which only very low levels of alder were identified from the Neolithic period. Wetland willow does have a consistent presence during the Neolithic period, however. 45 During the later Neolithic period the bog surface became considerably wetter (c. 4970 cal BP) (Verrill and Tipping 2010, 1017). While charcoal data for most likely wetland downy birch increases steadily through the Neolithic period, an increase in wetland alder is not noted in the charcoal identifications until the Early Bronze Age, where it remains an important part of the charcoal assemblage. Towards the end of the Neolithic, pollen data indicates that the bog basin became quite dry, with an expansion of pine (4767-4707 cal. BP.) (O’Connell and Molloy 2001, 108). This is not reflected in the charcoal identifications, only one fragment of pine were identified from one sample dating to the Neolithic. By the Early Bronze Age, birch, alder, oak and to a lesser extent hazel are the most important woodland taxa in the charcoal record. Hazel becomes considerably more important during the Middle Bronze Age, possibly indicating a further opening out of the landscape. Summary Charcoal was fully identified from 83 samples from the Céide field complex in Mayo. Thirteen wood taxa were identified. A low number of waterlogged structural wood samples were also identified. The results are dominated by birch, oak, hazel and alder. This mixture of canopy and light demanding trees indicate that the woodlands which most likely fringed the cleared fields were not closed canopy in nature. Furthermore, the wood taxa identified indicate different types of woodland were being exploited, including wetland, scrub and taller canopy woodlands. This site (coupled with Belderrig 04E0893) is unique in that it provides a well dated sequence of charcoal samples dating from the Mesolithic to the Early Bronze Age in Mayo. Acknowledgements: Thanks to Dr. Graeme Warren, Prof. Seamas Caulfield, Gretta Byrne and Noel Dunne for assistance on this project. Thanks to Dr. Ingelise Stuijts for confirming some of the charcoal identifications from the sites. 46 References Byrne, G., Warren, G., Walsh, P., Mc Ilreavy, D. and Rathbone, S., 2009a. Archaeological excavations at ‘Glenulra Scatter’ (92E140) Stratigraphic report. Unpublished report for the Heritage Council. Byrne, G., Dunne, N., Caulfield, S., Warren, G., Walsh, P., Mc Ilreavy, D. and Rathbone, S., 2009b. Archaeological excavations in association with the Céide Visitor Centre (E494) Stratigraphic report. Unpublished report for the Heritage Council. Byrne, G., Warren, G., Rathbone, S, Mc Ilreavy, D. and Walsh, P., 2009c. Archaeological excavations at Rathlacken (E580) Stratigraphic report. Unpublished report for the Heritage Council. Caulfield, S. 1998. Proceedings of the 16th International 14C Conference, edited by W. G. Mook and J. van der Plicht Radiocarbon, Vol. 40, No. 2, P. 629-640 Caulfield, S., Warren, G., Rathbone, S., Mc Ilreavy, D., and Walsh, P. 2009a. Archaeological excavations at the Glenulra enclosure (E24) Stratigraphic report. Unpublished report for the Heritage Council. Caulfield, S., Downes, M., Dunne, N., Warren, G., Rathbone, S., Mc Ilreavy, D and Walsh, P. 2009b. Archaeological excavations at Belderg Beg (E109) Stratigraphic report. Unpublished report for the Heritage Council. Gale, R. 2003. Wood based industrial fuels and their environmental impact in lowland Britain. In P. Murphy and P.E.J. Wiltshire (eds) The Environmental Archaeology of Industry. Oxbow books: Oxford 30-47. Gale, R., & Cutler, D., 2000. Plants in Archaeology. Identification of vegetative plant materials used in Europe and the southern Mediterranean to c. 1500. West Yorkshire: Westbury Publishing. Hather, J.G., 2000. The Identification of the Northern European Woods. A guide for archaeologists and conservators. London: Archetype Publications Ltd. Hickie, D., 2002. Native trees and forests of Ireland. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan Ltd Lipscombe, M. and Stokes, J. 2008. Trees and how to grow them. London: Think books. 47 Marguerie, D. and Hunot, J.Y. 2007. Charcoal analysis and dendrology: data from archaeological sites in north-western France. Journal of Archaeological Science 34 14171433. Mc Clatchie, M., 2010. Neolithic and Bronze Age landscapes of North Mayo. Analysis of nonwood plant macro-remains. Interim report. Unpublished report for University College Dublin. Molloy, K. and O'Connell, M., 1995. Palaeoecological investigations towards the reconstruction of environment and land-use changes during prehistory at Ceide Fields, western Ireland. Probleme der Küstenforschung im südlichen Nordseegebiet 23, 187-225. O’Carroll, E. forthcoming. Charcoal and wood analysis along the N5 Charleston Bypass. O’Connell, M. and Molloy, K. 2001. Farming and woodland dynamics in Ireland during the Neolithic. Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Vol. 101B, No 1-2, 99-128. O’Donnell, L. 2011a. People and woodlands: an investigation of charcoal remains as indicators of cultural selection and local environment in Bronze Age Ireland. PhD submitted to University College Dublin. O’Donnell, L., 2011b. Charcoal analysis from Belderrig (04E0853). Unpublished report for University College Dublin. Orme, B.J. and Coles, J.M., 1985. Prehistoric woodworking from the Somerset levels: 2 : Species selection and prehistoric woodlands. Somerset Levels papers, 11, 7-24 Schweingruber, F.H., 1978. Microscopic wood anatomy. Birmensdorf: Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research. Shackleton, C.M. and Prins, F. 1992. Charcoal analysis and the “Principle of Least Effort”- a conceptual model. Journal of Archaeological Science 19, 631-7. Smart, T. and Hoffman, E.S. 1988 Environmental interpretation of archaeological charcoal In C.A. Hastorf and V.S. Popper (ed) Current Paleoethnobotany. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press pp. 165-205. Stuijts, I. 2005 Wood and charcoal identification. In M. Gowen, J. Ó Neill and M. Philips (eds) The Lisheen Mine Archaeological Project 1996-8, 137-186. Wordwell, Dublin. 48 Verrill, L. and Tipping, R. 2010. Use and abandonment of a Neolithic field system at Belderrig, Co. Mayo, Ireland: Evidence for economic marginality. 20: The Holocene p 1011-1021. Warren, G. 2008. Fieldwork in Belderrig, Co. Mayo, 2004-2008. Unpublished report for University College Dublin. Wheeler, E.A, Bass, P. & Gasson, P.E. 1989. IAWA list of microscopic features for hardwood identification. IAWA Bulletin nos. 10 (3): 49 219-332.: Leiden: Rijksherbarium. Table 2 Charcoal identifications from Glenulra Enclosure (E24) Feature type Date Identification 4 Hearth Middle Neolithic Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 13 4 Hearth Middle Neolithic Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 4 Hearth Middle Neolithic 4 Hearth Middle Neolithic Sample Fragment count Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.16 2-4 Medium 2-3 strongly curved No No 18 0.2 2-4 Medium 1-2 weakly curved No Yes Pinus sp. L. (pine) 1 0.07 3 Medium 4 weakly curved No No c.f. Taxus sp. L. (yew) 1 0.01 too small to determine No No 50 Weight (g) 1 Medium 1 Table 3 Charcoal identifications from Glenulra (92E140) Sample No Feature No Feature type Date Identification 5 6 Charcoal rich spread Middle Neolithic Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 5 6 Charcoal rich spread Middle Neolithic 5 6 Charcoal rich spread Middle Neolithic 5 6 Charcoal rich spread Middle Neolithic 5 6 Charcoal rich spread Middle Neolithic 9 8 Stakehole Stakehole 9 8 Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.74 4-6 Medium 3-10 Strongly curved No No 1 0.02 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No 1 0.03 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No 2 0.01 3 Medium 4 Strongly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 1 0.02 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No Middle Neolithic Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 2 0.01 3 Medium 2-3 Strongly curved No No Middle Neolithic Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 1 0.02 5 Medium 4 Strongly curved No No Salix sp. L. (willow) Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 51 Fragment count Weight (g) 33 Comment Table 4 Charcoal identifications from Ceide fields (E494) Ctg Weight (g) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 20 Charcoal rich soil Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Charcoal rich soil Salix sp. L. (willow) Date 3 EBA 3 EBA 3 EBA 13 EBA H 13 Trench 13 EBA H 13 Trench 13 EBA H 13 Trench 16 EBA 16 EBA 16 EBA 16 EBA 16 EBA C C C H H H H H Context Fragment count Sample Description Identification 3 Charcoal rich soil 3 3 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.38 3-6 medium 2-6 strongly curved No No 1 0.01 2 medium 2 strongly curved No No 3 0.04 2-4 medium 1-2 strongly curved No No 11 0.64 2-7 medium 2-8 strongly curved No No 1 0.03 2 medium 4 strongly curved No No 1 0.07 4 medium 8 strongly curved No No 60 1.69 2-10 medium 2-8 strongly curved No No 9 Charcoal rich soil Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 9 Charcoal rich soil Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 5 0.18 2-4 medium 2-8 strongly curved No No 9 Charcoal rich soil Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 2 0.01 2-4 medium 3 strongly curved No No 9 Charcoal rich soil Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1 0.01 3 medium 3 weakly curved No No 9 Charcoal rich soil Salix sp. L. (willow) 1 0.06 2 medium 2 strongly curved No No 52 Comment Sample Date Ctg H Context Weight (g) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 5 Ash pit Corylus/Alnus (hazel/alder) Ash pit Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) Identification Ash pit Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.15 3-5 medium 4-13 strongly curved No No 1 0.02 2 medium 3 strongly curved No No 2 0.1 5 medium 4 strongly curved No No 13 0.94 2-8 medium 3-16 strongly curved No No 3 too small to record No No 19 L. Neo 19 L. Neo 19 L. Neo 22 EBA H 14 Trench 22 EBA H 14 Trench Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 1 0.12 2 22 EBA H 14 Trench Salix sp. L. (willow) 4 0.21 3 medium 3 strongly curved No No 25 L. Neo H 15 Ash pit 32 2.29 3-10 medium 2-10 strongly curved No No 25 L. Neo H 15 Ash pit Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.01 2 medium 2 strongly curved No No 25 L. Neo H 15 Ash pit Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 5 0.16 2-6 medium 4-7 strongly curved No No 25 L. Neo H 15 Ash pit Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1 0.04 2 medium 4 strongly curved No No 25 L. Neo H 15 Ash pit Salix sp. L. (willow) 1 0.01 2 3 too small to record No No 26 EBA H 20 Trench 73 3.11 2-10 2-16 strongly curved No No H H 15 Fragment count Description 15 15 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 53 medium Comment Context Fragment count Weight (g) 5 Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) Trench Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Trench Salix sp. L. (willow) Sample Date Ctg Description 26 EBA H 20 Trench 26 EBA H 20 Trench 26 EBA H 20 26 EBA H 20 28 EBA? 28 EBA? 35 EBA 10B 35 EBA 10B 35 EBA 10B 39 EBA/mixed 25 39 EBA/mixed 39 EBA/mixed Identification Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.27 4-10 medium 3-6 strongly curved No No 1 0.15 4 medium 3 strongly curved No No 1 0.15 5 medium 12 strongly curved No No 20 1.18 10-15 medium 13-17 strongly curved No No H 24c Stakehole Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 4 0.04 2-3 fast 1-2 strongly curved No No H 24c Stakehole Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 2 0.02 2-3 medium 1-3 weakly curved No No Hearth Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 71 7.03 6-14 medium 7-20 strongly curved No No Hearth Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 9-11 medium 10-24 weakly curved No Yes Hearth Salix sp. L. (willow) 5-10 medium 5-15 strongly curved No No 56 Charcoal layer Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 25 56 Charcoal layer 25 56 Charcoal layer 91 5.05 5-10 variable 5-26 strongly curved No No Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.02 3 medium 4 strongly curved No No Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 3 0.4 5-8 medium 8-12 strongly curved No No 54 Comment Twig Sample Date Ctg Context Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 39 EBA/mixed 25 56 Charcoal layer Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 4 0.35 5-10 medium 8-10 strongly curved No No 39 EBA/mixed 25 56 Charcoal layer Salix sp. L. (willow) 5 0.98 6-9 medium 6-9 strongly curved No No 55 Comment Table 5 Charcoal identifications from Belderg Beg (E109) Sample None Trench Time period Description Identification A1 EBA Charcoal adhering to pot Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 1 0.8 4 Medium 7 Strongly curved No No 4 0.03 2 Medium 2 Strongly curved No No 6 0.72 4-5 Medium 4-5 Weakly curved No No 2 A1 EBA Charcoal adhering to quern 19 A1 EBA Shallow area near pit 19 A1 EBA Shallow area near pit Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 4 1.25 5-8 Slow 15-20 Strongly curved No No 19 A1 EBA Shallow area near pit Hedera helix L. (ivy) 1 0.04 4 Medium 4 Strongly curved No No 19 A1 EBA Shallow area near pit Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 69 2.93 10-15 Medium 15-19 Weakly curved No No Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 80 13.24 20-25 Slow 25-30 Weakly curved No Yes 8 1.36 4-8 Medium 4-13 Weakly curved No No 22 A1 EBA Underlying brown habitation 27 A1 EBA Charcoal spread 27 A1 EBA Charcoal spread Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 5 0.55 12-15 Medium 8-15 Strongly curved No No 27 A1 EBA Charcoal spread Hedera helix L. (ivy) 2 0.17 6 Medium 10 Strongly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 56 Comment Sample 27 35 35 35 35 Trench Time period Description Identification A1 EBA Charcoal spread Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) EBA Charcoal spread, containing large pieces Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) EBA Charcoal spread, containing large pieces EBA Charcoal spread, containing large pieces Corylus avellana L. (hazel) EBA Charcoal spread, containing large pieces Pinus sp. L. (pine) A1 A1 A1 A1 35 A1 EBA Charcoal spread, containing large pieces 40 A1 EBA Charcoal spread 40 A1 EBA Charcoal spread 96 A1 EBA Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 10 1.24 10-15 Medium 10 Weakly curved No Yes 5 0.39 8 Medium 10-12 Weakly curved No No 18 1.31 4 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No 25 2.89 10-20 Medium 5-26 Strongly curved No No 1 0.42 8 Medium 8 Weakly curved No No Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 31 2.48 8-16 Medium 15-26 Weakly and curved No Yes Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 20 1.18 10-20 Medium 3-8 Weakly curved No No 2 0.06 4 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No 25 2.37 3-12 medium 5-9 Many No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Burnt residue 57 Strongly Comment All same Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count relating to horn B1 MBA Pit under flat stones 200 B1 MBA Pit under flat stones Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 200 B1 MBA Pit under flat stones 200 B1 MBA 200 B1 200 200 201 Insect holes Tyloses curved 200 201 Ring curvature branch 1 0.04 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No 18 0.58 3-5 Medium 2-5 Strongly curved No No Fraxinus sp. L. (ash) 7 0.41 4-5 Medium 3-5 Strongly curved No No Pit under flat stones Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 5 0.1 5 Medium 5 Strongly curved No No MBA Pit under flat stones Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 3 0.18 5-6 Medium 12-15 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Pit under flat stones Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 2 0.09 4 Medium 6 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Pit under flat stones Salix sp. L. (willow) 44 0.93 5-6 Fast 3-10 Strongly curved No No MBA Charcoal sample from wall trench containing quernstone MBA Charcoal sample from wall trench containing quernstone B1 B1 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 19 0.47 3-4 medium 5-8 Strongly curved 2-3 strongly curved No No roundwoods, bark present. Very friable. No roundwoods, bark present. Very friable. Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 24 Salix sp. L. (willow) 58 0.38 2-4 medium Comment No Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses MBA Under small stones around sill stone Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 0.19 3 Medium 3 Weakly curved No No MBA Under small stones around sill stone 3 0.03 1 Medium 2 No No MBA Under small stones around sill stone Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 70 1.73 6-7 Slow 3-16 Weakly curved MBA Under small stones around sill stone Salix sp. L. (willow) 1 0.04 4 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No MBA Wall trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.03 4 Medium 5 Strongly curved No No MBA Wall trench Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 16 1.13 6-7 Medium 4-5 Strongly curved No No MBA Foundation trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 71 3.37 2-11 Medium 2-12 Strongly curved No No MBA Foundation trench Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 5 0.17 8-10 Medium 4-12 Strongly curved No No MBA Foundation trench Salix sp. L. (willow) 4 0.1 4 Medium 4 Strongly curved No No MBA From amongst stones Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 5 0.39 4 Medium 4 weakly curved No No Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 2 0.19 5 Medium 4 No No B1 205 B1 205 B1 205 B1 205 213 213 226 226 226 234 234 B1 B1 B1 B1 B1 B1 B1 MBA Fragment count Weight (g) 6 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) From amongst strongly 59 Yes Comment Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count stones B1 234 234 235 235 235 235 235 235 236 238 238 B1 10-20 8 Medium 6 strongy curved No No 0.19 6-7 Medium 3-4 Weakly curved No No 1 0.04 4 Medium 4 Strongly curved No No From amongst stones Salix sp. L. (willow) 5 0.28 Wall trench Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 4 B2T EBA B2T EBA B2T EBA B2T EBA B1 MBA B1 MBA B1 MBA Wall trench No Medium MBA EBA No 10-14 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) B2T Tyloses Weakly and strongly curved MBA EBA Insect holes curved From amongst stones B2T Ring curvature 68 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 7.87 Wall trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 5 0.14 2-6 Medium 3-6 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 1 0.02 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 68 2.42 8-12 Medium 7-12 Weakly curved No Yes Wall trench Salix sp. L. (willow) 1 0.04 4 Medium 2 Strongly curved No No Sample of burnt timbers? Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 80 5.28 7-8 Medium 4-5 Weakly curved No No Wall trench Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 1 0.02 2 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 32 2.03 6-8 Medium 10-12 Strongly curved Yes 60 Comment Sample 238 238 238 241 241 241 241 Trench Time period B1 MBA B1 MBA B1 MBA B1 MBA B1 MBA B1 MBA B1 MBA 246 Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 4 2.35 10-12 Medium 8-9 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1 0.07 2 Medium 2 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Salix sp. L. (willow) 1 0.04 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 69 1.49 2-6 Medium 3-8 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 1 0.04 3 Medium 8 Weakly curved No No Wall trench Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 7 0.12 4-5 Medium 5-6 Strongly curved No No Wall trench Salix sp. L. (willow) 3 0.14 8 Medium 4 Strongly curved No No 61 18.15 2-11 medium 2-17 strongly curved No No 37 4.76 2-7 fast 3-4 strongly curved No No 7 0.04 3-4 Medium 2-3 No No Wall trench B1 B1 Charcoal sample from wall trench containing quernstone MBA 242 Weight (g) Identification Charcoal sample from wall trench containing quernstone MBA 242 Fragment count Description B1 MBA Under stone setting of Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Salix sp. L. (willow) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 61 Weakly curved Comment roundwoods Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses Strongly curved No No No Yes central flag Under stone setting of central flag Salix sp. L. (willow) 2 0.02 4 Medium 3 MBA Below entrance flagging Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 5 0.03 2-4 medium 2-4 B1 MBA Sample of flint and burnt wood Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 46 2.54 4-5 Medium 2-4 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Sample of flint and burnt wood 5 0.1 3-4 Medium 2-3 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Sample of flint and burnt wood Fraxinus sp. L. (ash) 1 0.01 2 Medium 2 Weakly curved No No B1 MBA Sample of flint and burnt wood Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 21 0.55 4-8 Medium 6-7 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Sample of flint and burnt wood Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 6 0.23 3 Medium 3 Weakly curved No Yes B1 MBA Sample of flint and burnt wood Salix sp. L. (willow) 5 0.14 3 Medium 3-8 Strongly curved No No 253 B2A EBA Charcoal sample Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 32 6.13 3-15 medium 2-24 strongly curved No No 253 B2A EBA Charcoal sample Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 10 1.6 8-11 medium 10-14 weakly curved No No B1 MBA 246 247 252 252 252 252 252 252 B1 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 62 weakly curved Comment Sample 253 Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) B2A EBA Charcoal sample Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 8 0.8 6-7 medium 6-7 strongly curved No No 13 2.25 11-14 medium 14-18 Weakly and strongly curved No Yes Salix sp. L. (willow) 14 2.52 12-18 fast 9-15 strongly curved No No 253 B2A EBA Charcoal sample 253 B2A EBA Charcoal sample B1 MBA Wall trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 44 2.01 5-12 Medium 2-13 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Wall trench Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 30 2.93 5-18 Medium 10-12 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Wall trench Salix sp. L. (willow) 6 0.28 5-6 Fast 2-3 Strongly curved No No B1 MBA Posthole Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 20 9.09 3-30 Medium 2-12 Strongly curved No No B2T EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 12 3.33 13-15 Medium 10-12 Weakly curved No No B2T EBA 9 2.72 9-14 Mixed 15-28 Strongly curved No No B2T EBA No No No No 254 254 254 255 256 256 256 256 B2T EBA Midden Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Midden Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 63 46 15.57 20-35 Medium 22-30 Medium to strongly curved 5 0.65 8-10 Medium 5-6 Weakly curved Comment Sample 256 Trench Time period B2T EBA 257 B2T 257 B2T 257 B2T 257 B2T 257 B2T 257 B2T 257 B2T 258 B2T 258 EBA EBA EBA Fragment count Weight (g) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 8 Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) Description Identification Midden Midden Midden Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 2.13 3-12 Medium 4-26 Weakly curved No Yes 6 0.28 6-12 Medium 6-9 Weakly curved No No 2 0.16 6 Medium 5 Strongly curved No No 14 0.46 3-8 Medium 2-8 Strongly curved No No Midden Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 2 0.05 8-10 Medium 6-8 Strongly curved No No Midden Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 3 0.27 4 Medium 7-8 Strongly curved No No Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 51 4.05 8-10 Medium 10-18 Weakly curved No No Midden Salix sp. L. (willow) 2 0.02 4 Medium 6 Strongly curved No No EBA Charcoal sample Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 11 5.15 15-16 Slow 20-33 Weakly curved No No B2T EBA Charcoal sample 4 1.18 10-16 Medium 7-8 Strongly curved No No 258 B2T EBA Charcoal sample Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 23 4.34 4-7 Medium 5-15 Strongly curved No No 258 B2T EBA Charcoal sample Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 2 0.26 8-9 Medium 4-9 Weakly curved No No EBA EBA EBA EBA Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 64 Comment Trench Time period Description Identification 258 B2T EBA Charcoal sample 258 B2T EBA Sample Fragment count Weight (g) Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 1 0.1 Charcoal sample Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 42 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 272 B1 MBA Burnt wood and soil from trench at entrance 277 B2P EBA Midden Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 6 Medium 6 Strongly curved No No 10.76 15-20 Medium 10-20 Weakly curved No Yes 80 7.55 10-14 Medium 10-14 Weakly curved No Yes 27 3.55 5-6 Slow 15-20 Weakly curved No No No No 11 1.13 3-6 Medium 2-6 Weakly and strongly curved Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 3 0.23 4-6 Medium 3-6 Strongly curved No No Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 4 0.84 10-16 Medium 4-15 Strongly curved No No EBA Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 35 1.78 5-6 Medium 10-15 Weakly curved No Yes B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 31 2.44 6-10 Fast/Medium 5-6 Weakly curved No No 319 B2P EBA Midden 58 3.44 4-12 Fast/Medium 3-6 Strongly curved No No 319 B2P EBA Midden 5 0.56 6-10 Slow/Medium 5-25 Strongly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 277 B2P EBA Midden 277 B2P EBA Midden 277 B2P EBA 277 B2P 319 Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 65 Comment Trench Time period Description Identification 319 B2P EBA Midden 319 B2P EBA 320 B2P EBA Sample Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 2 0.14 8 Medium 16 Weakly curved No No Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 4 0.17 8-9 Medium 8-9 Weakly curved No Yes Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 5 0.84 5-7 Slow 4-30 Weakly curved No No No No 69 2.57 5-20 Medium 5-15 Weakly and strongly curved Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 3 0.21 8 Medium 10 Strongly curved No No Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 2 0.41 7-18 Medium 5-12 Strongly curved No No EBA Midden Salix sp. L. (willow) 1 0.12 6 Medium 6 Weakly curved No No B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 20 0.65 4-7 Medium 4-7 Strongly curved No No 321 B2P EBA Midden 60 2.69 5-17 Fast 3-8 Strongly curved No No 321 B2P EBA Midden 1 0.05 3.5 Medium 8 Weakly curved No No 4-7 Weakly and strongly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 320 B2P EBA Midden 320 B2P EBA Midden 320 B2P EBA 320 B2P 321 322 B2P EBA Midden Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Salix sp. L. (willow) Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 66 32 3.3 5-20 Medium Comment Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses No No 48 2.05 6-12 Medium 6-8 Weakly and strongly curved 30 0.79 4-5 Medium 5-6 Strongly curved No No 45 2.15 6-7 Medium 5-6 Strongly curved No No Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 3 0.37 7-8 Medium 6-7 Strongly curved No No Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 1 0.03 3 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No EBA Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1 0.04 7 Medium 4 Weakly curved No No B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 30 1.65 6-11 Fast 6-35 Weakly curved No No 324 B2P EBA Midden 68 7.71 6-19 Fast 5-10 Strongly curved No No 324 B2P EBA Midden Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.58 4 Medium 5 Strongly curved No No 324 B2P EBA Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 1 0.05 6 Fast 32 Weakly curved No No 325 B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 42 4.17 7-12 Medium 2-18 weakly curved No No 325 B2P EBA Midden Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 33 5.01 5-12 Medium 6-8 No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 322 B2P EBA Midden 323 B2P EBA Midden 323 B2P EBA Midden 323 B2P EBA Midden 323 B2P EBA 323 B2P 324 Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) weakly 67 Comment Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses curved 325 B2P EBA Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 3 0.31 325 B2P EBA Midden Salix sp. L. (willow) 2 0.08 326 B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 11 1.6 326 B2P EBA Midden Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 20 4.92 5 1.53 326 B2P EBA Midden 327 B2P EBA Midden 327 B2P EBA Midden 327 B2P EBA 328 B2P 328 328 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 5 Medium 4 strongly curved No No 5 Medium 5 strongly curved No No 6-8 Medium 6-7 weakly curved No No 4-12 Medium 5-12 strongly curved No No No yes 10 Medium 7 weaky and strongly curved 2 0.08 3 Medium 2 Strongly curved No No Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 16 1.13 7-8 Medium 9-11 Strongly curved No No Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 62 1.94 8-15 Medium 14-23 Weakly curved No No EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 10 1.31 8-9 Mixed 7-35 Weakly curved No No B2P EBA Midden 40 4.06 6-8 Medium 6-14 Weakly curved No No B2P EBA Midden 3 0.12 5 Medium 3 Strongly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 68 Comment Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) 328 B2P EBA Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 2 328 B2P EBA Midden Salix sp. L. (willow) 329 B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 329 B2P EBA Midden 329 B2P EBA Midden 329 B2P EBA Midden 330 B2P EBA Midden 331 B2P EBA Midden 331 B2P EBA Midden 331 B2P EBA 331 B2P 332 B2P Sample Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.18 3-6 Medium 4-5 Weakly curved No No 3 0.11 3 Medium 2 Strongly curved No No 7 0.77 8 Medium 7 Weakly curved No No 10 1.01 8 Medium 6 Weakly curved No No Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 1 0.07 6 Medium 4 Weakly curved No No Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 7 0.57 8-10 Medium 4-12 Weakly curved No Yes 8 1.37 5-10 Fast 4-6 Strongly curved No No Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 23 2.92 8-16 Medium 8-15 moderately curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 55 3.18 8-10 Medium 4-7 strongly curved No No Midden Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.36 8 Medium 7 strongly curved No No EBA Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 1 0.03 10 Medium 13 strongly curved No No EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 33 1.38 3-15 Slow to fast 10-20 Weakly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 69 Comment Trench Time period Description 332 B2P EBA Midden 332 B2P EBA Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 332 B2P EBA Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) MBA Sample from between upper and lower level of paving stones. 1.75M S, 11.80M W Sample 900 900 B1 B1 Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 1.25 6-8 Medium 8-13 Strongly curved No No 15 0.35 4-5 Medium 3-5 Weakly curved No No 7 0.34 3-7 Medium 4-8 Weakly curved No Yes Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 60 5.66 10-12 Medium 9-12 Weakly curved Yes No MBA Sample from between upper and lower level of paving stones. 1.75M S, 11.80M W Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 2 0.3 7 Medium 8 Strongly curved No No Salix sp. L. (willow) 7 1.23 8 Fast 3-13 Strongly curved No No Weakly curved No No No No Identification Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Fragment count Weight (g) 45 900 B1 MBA Sample from between upper and lower level of paving stones. 1.75M S, 11.80M W 901 B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 5 0.39 6-8 Medium 3-6 901 B2P EBA Midden Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 19 1.23 8 Medium 18-21 Strongly 70 Comment Recent roots Sample Trench Time period Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses Comment curved 901 B2P EBA Midden Fraxinus sp. L. (ash) 1 0.01 2 Slow 3 Weakly curved No No 901 B2P EBA Midden Ilex aquifolium L. (holly) 2 0.01 3 Medium 3 Weakly curved No No 901 B2P EBA Midden Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 5 0.36 8 Medium 7 Strongly curved No No 901 B2P EBA Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 8 0.31 2-4 Medium 2-4 Weakly curved No No 902 B2P EBA Midden Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 28 1.01 8-10 medium 5 Weakly curved No No 902 B2P EBA Midden 6-7 Medium 5-6 Moderately curved No No 902 B2P EBA Midden Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 4 medium 4 Strongly curved No No 902 B2P EBA Midden Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1 5 medium 5 Weakly curved No No 24 strongly curved 1152 Burnt wood over grass matting over burnt paving Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 50 4 Fraxinus sp. L. (ash) 71 1.62 0.03 0.14 3.09 14-15 Medium No No Roundwood, probably the same piece Table 6 Sample assessment Belderg Beg (E109) Sample Reason for not analysing 2 Peat 5 Charcoal too small for identification 19 Peat 22 Peat 32 Peat 33 Peat 33 Peat 40 Charcoal too small for identification 243 Peat 245 Charcoal too small for identification 308 Peat 312 Peat 313 Peat 72 Table 7 Wood identification details Belderg Beg (E109) Sample no Identification Trench 239 Unidentified, too degraded B1 293 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) C1 Wooden post axe trimmed 295 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) C1 Wooden post (no 7) 296 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) C1 Wooden post (after wall on bog) 297 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) C1 Wooden post - split 298 Unidentified, too degraded C1 Wooden post (no 5) 1151 Salix sp. L. (willow) 1153 floor matting 1232 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1233 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1234 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1235 Quercus sp. 73 Description Sample no Identification Trench L./Liebl (oak) 1237 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1240 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Bag 13 Box 12 co ords 267.3 98.35 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Bag 9 Box 12 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Box 12 Bag 2 co ords 266.3 102.2 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Box 12 Bag 5 co ords 200 C04203 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Box 12 Bag 6 Unidentified, too degraded Box 9 Bag 8 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 74 Description Table 8 Charcoal identifications from Rathlackan (E580) Cutting Sample Date Feature Description Identification B 3 LN 6 Hearth (in house) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) B 3 LN 6 Hearth (in house) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) E/MN 21 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) C 14 14 C C C Layer E/MN C C 21 19 19 19 19 UNKNOWN UNKNOWN UNKNOWN UNKNOWN Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 2 0.31 8 medium 12 strongly curved No No 98 7.36 1012 medium 13-20 strongly curved No No 1 0.01 2 medium 2 strongly curved No No strongly curved No No 4 No No medium 10-15 No No medium 4 No No No No 3 0.03 2-3 medium 1-3 5 0.39 5 medium 65 2.39 1012 1 0.21 4 Salix sp. L. (willow) 27 Layer (charcoal rich soil on top of F2) 27 Layer (charcoal rich soil on top of F2) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 27 Layer (charcoal rich soil on top of F2) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 27 Layer (charcoal rich soil on top of F2) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) Salix sp. L. (willow) 75 29 2.58 8-12 medium 3-14 weakly curved Comment pith Friable charcoal, difficult to identify Cutting Sample Date Feature Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) 15 9 F 22 EBA 31 Layer Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) F 22 EBA 31 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.03 F 22 EBA 31 Layer Ilex aquifolim (holly) 30 1 F C C C C C F F Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 2-3 fast 6-7 strongly curved No No No No No No 5 7 4-9 10-20 No No strongly curved No No 3 strongly curved No No medium 4 strongly curved No No 2 medium 3 strongly curved No No 0.01 2 medium 2 strongly curved No No 1 0.01 3 No No 2 0.21 8 No No 22 EBA 31 Layer Salix sp. L. (willow) 54 0.63 5-6 31 E/MN ? 40 Stakehole Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 1 0.02 3 medium 9 31 E/MN ? 40 Stakehole Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 1 0.02 3 medium 31 E/MN ? 40 Stakehole Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 3 0.03 2-3 32 E/MN ? 41 Stakehole Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 4 0.08 32 E/MN ? 41 Stakehole Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 1 34 LN 44 Layer Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 34 LN 44 Layer c.f. Salix sp. L. (willow) 76 strongly curved 3-6 strongly curved 2 medium 1 strongly curved Comment 1 Betula fragment put into the Salix bag Cutting F F F F F F F F Sample Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.15 3-5 medium 2-3 strongly curved No No 1 0.03 3 medium 4 strongly curved No No Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 2 0.02 2 medium 2 strongly curved No No Layer Ulmus sp. L. (elm) 3 0.03 3 medium 2 weakly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 2 0.91 strongly curved No No 30 LayerCharcoal stuck to pottery strongly curved No No 31 LayerCharcoal stuck to pottery strongly curved No No 31 Charcoal stuck to pottery 3-5 strongly curved No No 2-10 strongly curved and weakly curved No No No No Feature Description Identification 34 LN 44 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 34 LN 44 Layer Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 34 LN 44 Layer 34 LN 44 36 38 EBA EBA 38 EBA 42 E/MN ? 42 49 Layer 49 Layer 49 Layer E/MN ? F F Size (mm) Date 42 E/MN ? Fragment count Weight (g) 14 fast 8 Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 1 0.12 slow 3 1 0.1 Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Maloideae sp. 77 15 fast Salix sp. L. (willow) Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 3 8 2 0.07 4-5 11 0.54 3-5 1 0.04 4 4 medium medium 4 strongly Comment Cutting Sample Date Feature Description Identification Fragment count Weight (g) Size (mm) Growth Ring count (pomaceous fruitwood) F F F F F F F F F F F F 42 E/MN ? 49 Layer Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 42 E/MN ? 49 Layer Salix sp. L. (willow) 45 E/MN 58 Layer 45 E/MN 58 Layer 45 E/MN 58 Layer Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 45 E/MN 58 Layer 45 E/MN 58 47 E/MN ? 47 Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses curved 16 1.06 3-5 4-5 both No No 2 0.02 2-4 3 strongly curved No No Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 1 0.08 4 slow 15 strongly curved No No Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 9 0.15 4 medium 4-5 strongly curved No No 12 0.33 2-4 medium 2-4 weakly curved No Yes Salix sp. L. (willow) 4 0.04 3 medium 2 No No Layer Ulmus sp. L. (elm) 1 0.01 2 medium 2 weakly curved No No 63 Layer Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 1 0.02 medium 3 strongly curved No No E/MN ? 63 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 34 0.75 4-10 medium 4-9 strongly curved No No 47 E/MN ? 63 Layer Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 2 0.16 3-10 medium 6-8 strongly curved No No 47 E/MN ? 63 Layer Pinus sp. L. (pine) 1 0.01 2 medium 2 weakly curved No No 47 E/MN ? 63 Layer Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 3 0.07 3 medium 2-3 weakly curved No No 78 Comment medium Twig Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 0.07 3 medium 3-5 strongly curved No No 6 0.21 4 No No 14 1.2 3-15 No No Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 3 0.18 4-6 2-10 strongly curved No No Layer Salix sp. L. (willow) 2 0.24 6 7 strongly curved No No 66 Pit Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 2 0.01 2 medium 3 strongly curved No No mixed 66 Pit Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 18 0.36 4-8 medium 8-13 strongly curved No No 50 mixed 66 Pit Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 8 0.07 4-5 medium 3-5 weakly curved No Yes 50 mixed 66 Pit Salix sp. L. (willow) 2 0.02 2 medium 3 strongly curved No No 50 mixed 66 Pit Ulmus sp. L. (elm) 2 0.01 2 medium 2 weakly curved No No slot trench Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 2 0.02 3 medium 4 strongly curved No No slot trench Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 1 0.02 3 medium 3 weakly curved No No Date Feature Description Identification 47 E/MN ? 63 Layer Salix sp. L. (willow) C 48 E/MN ? 64 Layer Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) C 48 E/MN ? 64 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) C 48 E/MN ? 64 Layer C 48 E/MN ? 64 50 mixed 50 Cutting F F F F F F Sample ? 59 56 ? 59 56 79 Fragment count Weight (g) 4 3-4 mixed strongly curved 13-15 Comment Cutting Sample Date Feature ? 59 56 ? 59 56 C C C C C C C F F F Description Identification slot trench Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Fragment count Weight (g) 2 0.02 Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses Comment 3 medium 4 weakly curved No No Beetle remains in sample 3 medium 3 weakly curved No No No Yes slot trench Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 1 0.01 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) 125 1.76 4-7 medium 1-10 strongly curved 7 0.1 4-5 medium 3-5 strongly curved No No 18 0.14 4-6 medium 4-6 strongly curved No No 5 0.18 14 medium 4-15 strongly curved No No 1 0.04 5 medium 5 strongly curved No No 2 0.09 4 medium 3-4 strongly curved No No 1 0.09 5 medium 8 strongly curved No No 2 0.05 3 medium 3 strongly curved No No 1 0.02 3 medium 2 strongly curved No No 2 0.07 3-4 medium 3 strongly curved No No 60 E/MN ? 97 Layer 61 MN 68 Layer Betula sp. Roth/Ehrh (birch) 61 MN 68 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 61 MN 68 Layer Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 61 MN 68 Layer 63 E/MN ? 93 Pit 63 E/MN ? 93 Pit 66 E/MN 87 Layer 66 E/MN 87 Layer 67 E/MN 87 Layer Salix sp. L. (willow) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Salix sp. L. (willow) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 80 Cutting F F F F F H C C C C Sample Fragment count Weight (g) Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 2 0.1 Layer Alnus sp. L. Gärtner (alder) 3 95 Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) E/MN 95 Layer Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) E/MN 95 Layer Date Feature Description Identification 67 E/MN 87 Layer 69 E/MN 95 69 E/MN 69 69 Organic layer with pottery within it, collapse 72 E/MN 73 E/MN 78 Stakehole 73 E/MN 78 Stakehole 75 E/MN 75 E/MN 65 107 107 Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Size (mm) Growth Ring count Ring curvature Insect holes Tyloses 3 medium 4 strongly curved No No 0.11 2-4 medium 3-4 strongly curved No No 29 0.3 2-4 medium 4-6 strongly curved No No 1 0.19 3 medium 3 strongly curved No No 5 0.11 5 medium 3-4 weakly curved No Yes 3 0.1 No Yes No No No No Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) Corylus avellana L. (hazel) Quercus sp. L./Liebl (oak) weakly curved medium 4 4 6 0.02 2 medium 1-2 strongly curved 2 0.03 2 medium 1-2 strongly curved Layer Maloideae sp. (pomaceous fruitwood) 2 0.07 3 medium 2-4 strongly curved No No Layer Corylus avellana L. (hazel) 2 0.05 3 medium 2-4 strongly curved No No 81 Comment Table 9 Charcoal identifications from Rathlackan (E580) Sample Feature Reason for not analysing 2 6 Charcoal analysed from this context already 17 27 Charcoal analysed from this context already 20 30 No identifiable charcoal 38 31 Charcoal analysed from this context already 52 68 Charcoal analysed from this context already 54 65 Charcoal analysed from this context already 58 96 Charcoal analysed from this context already 61 68 Charcoal analysed from this context already 64 66 Charcoal analysed from this context already 67 87 No identifiable charcoal 68 95 Charcoal analysed from this context already 82 Table 8 Sample assessment Rathlackan (E580) Sample Feature Reason for not analysing 2 6 Charcoal completed from this context already 17 27 Charcoal completed from this context already 20 30 No identifiable charcoal 38 31 Charcoal completed from this context already 52 68 Charcoal completed from this context already 54 65 Charcoal completed from this context already 58 96 Charcoal completed from this context already 61 68 Charcoal completed from this context already 64 66 Charcoal completed from this context already 67 87 No identifiable charcoal 68 95 Charcoal completed from this context already 83 Analysis of non-wood plant macro-remains Meriel McClatchie, UCD School of Archaeology Introduction A total of 69 samples from excavations at Rathlackan court tomb, Behy-Glenulra (Céide Fields) visitor centre, Glenulra scatter, and Belderg Beg roundhouse and field system were examined for their archaeobotanical content. Thirty samples from Rathlackan, 11 samples from the Céide Fields visitor centre, two samples from Glenulra and 26 samples from Belderg Beg were analysed. A relatively small quantity of non-wood plant macro-remains was recorded, including cultivated remains and potentially gathered foodstuffs. This report provides information on the recovery and analysis of non-wood plant macroremains from the examined deposits. The methods employed in the extraction and identification of remains will firstly be outlined. The following section will investigate the types of plant remains recorded and the deposits from which the remains were derived. These results will then be discussed in a more general temporal and geographic context. Recommendations on retention of the material as part of the site archive will also be suggested. Methodology The soil samples had previously been processed, using conventional flotation methods, before the flots (floated material) were presented to the author for analysis. Examination of the flots was carried out using a stereo-microscope, with magnifications ranging from x6.3 to x50. The archaeobotanical material was identified by comparison to reference material in McClatchie’s collection of modern diaspores. Botanical and common names follow the order and nomenclature of New flora of the British Isles (Stace 1991). When referring to specific deposits, the term ‘F.’ refers to Feature number, and ‘S.’ refers to Sample number. Plant macro-remains recorded Rathlackan court tomb (E580) Thirty samples from excavations at the Rathlackan court tomb were presented for analysis, 14 of which contained non-wood plant macro-remains. All of the material was preserved as a result of charring, and all of the taxa recorded are likely to represent plants growing in the local environment. 84 Phase F. S. Trench Deposit type Location Plant remains present LN 6 3 B Layer House interior: hearth … E/MN 21 14 C Layer Court area: above ground surface and beneath collapse x E/MN? 26 12 C Stake-hole fill Court area: stake-hole … EBA 30 36 F Layer Rear chamber … EBA 31 22 F Layer Rear chamber … E/MN? 40 31 C Stake-hole fill Court area: stake-hole … E/MN? 41 32 C Stake-hole fill Court area: stake-hole x LN 44 34 F Layer Rear chamber x E/MN? 49 42 F Layer Rear chamber x E/MN? 56 59 C Slot-trench fill Beneath southern arm of cairn … E/MN 58 45 F Layer Rear chamber: SE area, pit fill x E/MN? 63 47 F Layer Rear chamber: burnt deposit x E/MN? 64 48 C Layer Court area: layer above hearth x E/MN 65 70 H Layer Middle chamber: beneath collapse … E/MN 65 71 H Layer Middle chamber: beneath collapse … E/MN 65 72 H Layer Middle chamber: beneath collapse … Mixed 66 50 F Layer Rear chamber: pit fill x Mixed 66 64 F Layer Rear chamber: pit fill … E/MN 68 52 C Layer Court area: deposit surrounding hearth stone x E/MN 68 61 C Layer Court area: deposit surrounding hearth stone x E/MN 78 73 C Stake-hole fill Court area: stake-hole x E/MN 78 111 C Stake-hole fill Court area: stake-hole … E/MN 87 66 F Layer Rear chamber … E/MN 87 67 F Layer Rear chamber … LN? 93 63 C Pit fill Court area: small pit x E/MN 95 68 F Layer Rear chamber: N area, beneath rough stone surface x E/MN 95 69 F Layer Rear chamber: N area, beneath rough stone surface x E/MN? 97 60 C Layer Court area … E/MN 107 75 C Layer Court area: deposit beneath hearth … E/MN? 111 78 C Pit fill Court area: south of hearth … Table 1: Examined deposits from Rathlackan court tomb: (x = present) 85 Plant macro-remains were recorded in six samples within the court area, all of which are thought to date to the Early–Middle Neolithic period. The largest quantity of remains was recorded in the fill of a stake-hole in the court area, F.78, which contained 48 shell fragments of Corylus avellana L. (hazelnut). Smaller quantities of hazelnut shell fragments were recorded in four other contexts – a stake-hole fill at the forecourt entrance (F.41), a deposit surrounding the hearth-stone (F.68), a layer above the hearth (F.64), and a deposit located above the ground surface and beneath the tomb collapse (F.21). Plant macro-remains that are thought to date to the Early–Middle Neolithic period were also recorded in five deposits within the rear chamber of the court tomb. Small quantities of hazelnut shell fragments were present in layers within the rear chamber (F.49, F.63 and F.95). A small number of achenes (seeds) of Rumex acetosa L. (sorrel) and Rumex spp. (docks) were also found in layers F.63 and F.95, as well as in pit fill F.58. Sorrel and species of the dock genus can grow in a variety of environments, including grassy areas, cultivated fields and on disturbed ground around settlements. Botanical name F. 21 41 44 49 58 63 64 66 68 68 78 93 95 95 S. 14 32 34 42 45 47 48 50 52 61 73 63 68 69 1 2 3 3 12 48 … 1 … … … … … … … Plant part Common name Nutshell fragment Hazelnut 16 5 1 1 … Rumex acetosa L. Achene Common sorrel … … … … 1 Rumex spp. Achene Docks … … … … … Rubus sp. Nutlet Bramble … … … … … 1 … … … … cf. Malus sylvestris Mill. Endocarp fragment Possible crab-apple … … 1 … … … … … 1 … Culm fragment Grass … … … … … … … … 2 … CORYLACEAE Corylus avellana L. POLYGONACEAE … 1 … … … 4 … 1 ROSACEAE GRAMINEAE Gramineae Table 2: Plant macro-remains recorded at Rathlackan A Late Neolithic layer within the rear chamber (F.44) contained a possible crab-apple endocarp fragment, as well as a hazelnut shell fragment. A small pit located within the court area (F.93) is most likely early/middle Neolithic but may date to the Late Neolithic period, and this pit contained a possible endocarp (core) fragment of Malus sylvestris Mill. (crabapple) and a culm (stem) fragment of Gramineae (indeterminate grass). An undated pit fill within the rear chamber (F.66) contained a nutlet (seed) of Rubus spp. (bramble) and hazelnut shell fragments. 86 Behy-Glenulra: Céide Fields visitor centre (E494) Eleven samples were analysed from excavations carried out in association with construction of the Céide Fields visitor centre. The deposits were located in Zone 1 and were excavated during the 1989 phase of investigations at this location. Non-wood plant macro-remains were absent from all 11 samples. Phase F. S. Trench Deposit EBA 3 3 C Burnt layer EBA 9 16 H Layer EBA 11 18 H Burnt layer EBA 11 27 H Burnt layer EBA 13 … H Shallow trench EBA? 14 … H Possible shallow trench LN 15 19 H Fill of pit (F.19) LN 16 29 H Fill of pit (F.19) EBA? 20 … H Shallow trench LN 21 30 H Fill of pit (F.19) EBA? 24c 28 H Fill of stake-hole in possible structure Table 3: Examined deposits from Céide Fields visitor centre Glenulra scatter (92E0140) Two deposits from excavations at the Glenulra scatter were presented for analysis, neither of which contained non-wood plant macro-remains. Phase F. S. Deposit MN? 6 5 Shallow spread MN? 8 9 Fill of stake-hole Table 4: Examined deposits from Glenulra scatter 87 Belderg Beg roundhouse and field systems (E109) Twenty-six samples from excavations at Belderg Beg were presented for analysis, four of which contained non-wood plant macro-remains. All the material was preserved as a result of charring, and both cultivated and wild plants were represented. Phase S. Trench Deposit type/location EBA 2 A1 Charcoal spreads: deposit adhering to quern stone … EBA? 19 A1 Charcoal spreads: shallow area near pit … EBA? 22 A1 Charcoal spreads: beneath brown habitation soil … EBA? 27 A1 Charcoal spreads: possible spread … EBA? 35 A1 Charcoal spreads … EBA? 40 A1 Charcoal spreads … EBA 96 A1 Deposit … MBA 200 B1 House: Base of pit beneath flat stones … MBA 201 B1 House: wall trench containing quernstone … MBA 205 B1 House: beneath small stones around sill stone x MBA 213 B1 Wall slot … MBA 226 B1 House: SE quadrant foundation trench … MBA 234 B1 House: deposit amongst stones … MBA 236 B1 House: burnt timber … MBA 238 B1 Wall slot … MBA 241 B1 Wall slot … MBA 242 B1 House: wall trench … MBA 243 B1 Wall slot … MBA 247 B1 House: beneath entrance flagging x MBA 252 B1 House: shattered flint and burnt wood … EBA 253 B2a Charocal spreads: deposit that pre-dates ploughing … MBA 254 B1 House: wall trench W of site … MBA 255 B1 House: near post hole … EBA 256 B2T East B2T possible midden … EBA 901 B2P West B2P possible midden x EBA 902 B2P West B2P possible midden x Table 5: Examined deposits from Belderg Beg 88 Plant remains present A possible midden (B2P) contained a small quantity of hazelnut shell fragments (S.901 and S.902). Cereal remains, consisting of grains of Hordeum vulgare L. (barley), were found beneath entrance flagging at the house (S.247), while achenes of Persicaria spp. (knotweeds) were recorded in the area around the sill stone at the house (S.205). Species of the knotweeds genus can grow in a variety of environments, including cultivated fields and on disturbed ground around settlements. S. Botanical name 205 247 Plant part Common name Nutshell fragment Hazelnut Achene Knotweeds Hordeum vulgare L. Grain Barley 2 Hordeum vulgare L. Grain fragment Barley 1 Gramineae Grain Indeterminate grass 1 901 902 1 1 CORYLACEAE Corylus avellana L. POLYGONACEAE Persicaria spp. 2 GRAMINEAE Table 6: Plant macro-remains recorded at Belderg Beg Four samples from excavations at Belderg Beg were previously examined by Mick Monk, revealing evidence for c. 100 fragments of hazelnut shell (M. Monk, pers. comm. 2010). Further hazelnut remains were also present in a number of B2T and B2P ‘midden’ deposits that were not examined as part of this study. Discussion Overview Deposits from four sites – Rathlackan court tomb, Glenulra scatter, Céide Fields visitor centre and Belderg Beg house and field system – were examined for their archaeobotanical content. Non-wood plant macro-remains were recorded only at the Rathlackan court tomb and the Belderg Beg settlement. Remains at Rathlackan consisted of wild plants, some of which may have been collected, while both wild and cultivated plants were represented at Belderg Beg. 89 Cultivated remains The presence of a small quantity of barley grains in a Middle Bronze Age deposit associated with the entrance to the house at Belderg Beg is of particular interest. Previous studies of plant macro-remains have indicated that barley is often, although not exclusively, the predominant cereal type at Middle–Late Bronze Age settlement sites in Ireland (Monk 1986; McClatchie 2007; Fuller et al. in press). Its presence at Belderg Beg represents, therefore, a commonly occurring cereal of this period. This plant macro-remains evidence also correlates well with results from other environmental studies in this area. Soil microphological analysis of Bronze Age deposits at Belderg Beg has demonstrated that cereal cultivation was taking place, while analysis of pollen remains also indicates that barley was being cultivated (Verrill and Tipping 2010), As well as the presence of cereals at Belderg Beg, it is the location of the cereal remains at this site that is of interest. The cereal remains were found at the entrance of the house, beneath flagging. The cereal remains could be interpreted as simply representing floorsweepings, which accumulated at the edge of the structure. There is, however, increasing evidence at Bronze Age sites in Ireland for the deposition of materials at boundary locations. As well as the discovery of cereal grains at the entrance area, a number of saddle querns were found in the packing of post-holes at the Belderg Beg house (Caulfield et al. 2009, 35). There are also a number of other Bronze Age settlements in Ireland with comparable deposits, for example the saddle-quern fragments recorded at the entrance post-holes in structures at Ballybrowney, Co. Cork (Cleary 2006, 20).. A similar practice has been recognised at Bronze Age settlement sites in southern Britain (Brück 1999a, 152–4). Entrances may have been regarded as boundary areas – barriers between the safe, inside and the unknown, outside worlds – that were deemed suitable for the deposition of food and associated remains. Remains could have been placed as token offerings, being deposited at various times throughout the life of the structure, and perhaps also on abandonment (Brück 1999a, 154; 1999b, 334; 2006, 300–01). It should, therefore, be considered that these cereal remains were deliberately deposited in this location at Belderg Beg, rather than simply representing discarded debris. Although the presence of charred cereal grains at Belderg Beg is an important find, it should be noted that very few remains were recorded. Given the archaeological, soil micromorphological and palynological evidence for cereal-related activity at this location, the relatively small quantity of actual cereal grains is somewhat disappointing. Indeed, cereal macro-remains have been somewhat elusive from excavations of prehistoric sites in this area. A notable exception is the very small quantity of cereal remains that was present at the Early Neolithic rectangular structure in nearby Ballyglass (McClatchie, in press). The somewhat paltry evidence for cereal macro-remains at Belderg Beg underlines the importance of conducting multi-proxy analyses when investigating the potential for past agricultural activity – a reliance on the plant macro-remains alone from Belderg Beg might have produced a somewhat different picture. 90 Wild remains Hazelnut shell fragments dominated the assemblage at Rathlackan, with smaller quantities of common sorrel, bramble and crab-apple remains also present. Hazelnut remains were also recorded at Belderg Beg, in addition to knotweed remains. The predominance of hazelnut shell at Rathlackan is partly due to taphonomic issues, whereby hazelnut shells are more likely to be preserved when compared with many other plant categories. Nutshell may have been discarded into fires in order to reduce its mass or to act as fuel. The robust shells are therefore more likely to be charred and preserved when compared with plants that are more often eaten raw or boiled, such as vegetables and fruits. It is therefore likely that the activities at Rathlackan, and indeed Belderg Beg, may have incorporated a wider range of plants than that represented in the examined deposits. It is clear, however, that hazelnuts appear to have been available at Rathlackan and Belderg Beg, providing a seasonally available, highly nutritious foodstuff. Hazelnuts are strongly associated with prehistoric food procurement strategies in many parts of northern Europe, including at Irish Neolithic and Bronze Age sites (McComb and Simpson 1999). The presence of crab-apple remains in what appear to be Late Neolithic (and perhaps earlier) deposits associated with the tomb at Rathlackan is interesting. Apple endocarp remains dating to the Late Neolithic have previously been recorded in cremation pits at Castletown Tara 1, Co. Meath (Elder 2009). In Britain, a number of later Neolithic–earlier Bronze Age sites have produced crab-apple endocarp fragments, pips and even whole and half apples, which have sometimes been interpreted as ‘ritual’ deposits (e.g. at Clifton Quarry, Worcestershire; E. Pearson, pers. comm.). The remains of crab-apple, as well as hazelnut and bramble, at Rathlackan may represent the remains of meals consumed by the living during burial ceremonies, or may have been deliberately placed into deposits at the court tomb in order to accompany or represent the dead. The presence of charcoal from hazel and Maloideae (pomaceous fruitwood, which includes apple) in deposits at Rathlackan suggests that the wood of these plants may also have been used in activities at this location, while hazel wood was also recorded in Rathlackan deposits (L. O’Donnell, pers. comm.). The stone-built Neolithic field systems of the North Mayo region are often interpreted as being constructed for the containment of animals, due to the large size of the fields (Caulfield 1978; Waddell 2000, 36). It should be considered, however, that organic boundaries, making use of scrub plants such as hazel, crab-apple and bramble, may also have been utilised to sub-divide these fields. Given the evidence for cereal pollen in deposits contemporary with the Neolithic field systems (for example, O’Connell and Molloy 2001, 104–6), it should be considered that smaller arable fields, sub-divided by organic boundaries, were also a feature of Neolithic agricultural activity in this region. 91 The presence of common sorrel and docks seeds in deposits at Rathlackan, and knotweeds seeds at Belderg Beg may represent plants that were growing locally. Common sorrel may have been gathered for consumption, as it provides leaves and flowering heads that can be eaten as leafy greens (Mears and Hillman 2007, 261). The knotweeds seeds at Belderg Beg may similarly represent locally growing weeds, or plants that were growing alongside the cereals and inadvertently harvested, Recommendation for retention/deaccessioning It is recommended that the charred plant macro-remains from this site should be retained for any future analyses that may be carried out. Future investigations may utilise new scientific analyses of previously excavated material, including further radiocarbon dating. A recent development in archaeological science is the ability to carry out 14C AMS dating on single plant components (e.g. a seed or nutshell fragment). The remains of annual plants – such as hazelnut shell and cereal grains – are ideal material for radiocarbon dating, as they are more likely to produce narrow date-ranges when compared with longer-lived species (e.g. wood charcoal). Another recent development in archaeological science is the exploration of palaeo-diets and agricultural reconstruction through the analysis of crop stable isotope ratios. The practice of manuring (use of animal dung as fertiliser to enhance crop yields) causes substantial enrichment of crop 15N ratios, which can be detected through the scientific analysis of charred cereal grains (Bogaard et al. 2007). Stable isotope analysis of the cereal grains at Belderg Beg could therefore provide new insights into agricultural practices in Bronze Age Ireland. This material requires relatively little storage space. Charred remains are stable and do not usually require additional conservation when stored in an appropriate manner (e.g. in welllabelled hard-cased vials). Conclusions Analysis of archaeobotanical remains from four sites – Rathlackan court tomb, BehyGlenulra (Céide Fields) visitor centre, Glenulra scatter, and Belderg Beg roundhouse and field system – produced evidence for a small quantity of cultivated and wild remains. Archaeobotanical material was absent from the examined samples at Glenulra scatter and the Céide Fields visitor centre. Deposits at Rathlackan provided evidence for a range of plants that may have been gathered as foodstuffs, including hazelnut, crab-apple, bramble and common sorrel. These potential foodstuffs may have been consumed during activities at the tomb, such as burial ceremonies, or may have been deposited to accompany or represent the dead. Hazel, crab-apple and bramble shrubs may also have been utilised in the prehistoric field systems of North Mayo, perhaps providing material for organic boundaries in the sub-division of the larger stone-built field walls. Barley remains were recorded at the entrance to the house at Belderg Beg, representing the only cultivated remains identified from any of these sites. Hazelnut shell and knotweed remains were also present. The presence of cereal remains complements other archaeological evidence at Belderg Beg, including the field system and quern stones, indicating that cereal-related activities were taking place at this location. 92 References Beijerinck, W. 1947. Zadenatlas der Nederlandsche Flora. Wageningen: H. Veenman & Zonen. Bogaard, A., Heaton, T.H.E., Poulton, P. and Merbach, I. 2007. The impact of manuring on nitrogen isotope ratios in cereals: archaeological implications for reconstruction of diet and crop management practices. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 335–43. Brück, J. 1999a. Houses, lifecycles and depositions on Middle Bronze Age settlements in southern England. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 65, 145–66. Brück, J. 1999b. Ritual and rationality: some problems of interpretation in European archaeology. European Journal of Archaeology 2(3), 313–44. Brück, J. 2006. Fragmentation, personhood and the social construction of technology in Middle and Late Bronze Age Britain. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 16(3), 297–315. Caulfield, S. 1978. Neolithic fields. In H.C. Bowen and P.J. Fowler (eds), Early land allotment in the British Isles: a survey of recent work, 137–43. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports British Series 48. Caulfield, S., Byrne, G., Downes, M., Dunne, N., Warren, G., Rathbone, S., McIlreavy, D. and Walsh, P. 2009. Archaeological excavations at Belderg Beg (E109) Stratigraphic report. Excavation report prepared for UCD School of Archaeology. Downloaded from http://www.ucd.ie/archaeology/research/researcha-z/nbnm/ in December 2010. Cleary, K. 2006. Irish Bronze Age settlements: more than meets the eye? Archaeology Ireland 20(2), 18–21. Elder, S.D. 2009. M3 Clonee–North of Kells Motorway. Report on the archaeological excavation of Castletown Tara 1, Co. Meath; Ministerial Directions No. A008/025; E3078. ACS Ltd. Downloaded from http://www.m3motorway.ie/Archaeology/Section2/CastletownTara1/ in December 2010. 93 Fuller, D., Stevens, C. and McClatchie, M. (in press) Routine activities, tertiary refuse and labor organization: social inferences from everyday archaeobotany. In M. Madella and M. Savard (eds), Ancient Plants and People – Contemporary Trends in Archaeobotany. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. Katz, N.J., Katz, S.V. and Kipiani, M.G. 1965. Atlas and keys of fruits and seeds occurring in the quaternary deposits of the USSR. Moscow: Nauka. McClatchie, M. (in press). Appendix 4: Plant remains. In S. Ó Nuailláin and S. Greene (eds), Excavation of the centre-court tomb and underlying house site at Ballyglass, Co. Mayo. Seandálaíocht Monograph 3. Dublin: UCD School of Archaeology. McClatchie, M. 2007. The study of plant macro-remains: investigating past societies and landscapes. In E. Murphy and N. Whitehouse (eds), Environmental archaeology in Ireland, 194–220. Oxford: Oxbow. McComb, A.M.G. and Simpson, D. 1999. The wild bunch: exploitation of the hazel in prehistoric Ireland. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 58, 1–16. Mears, R. and Hillman, G. 2007. Wild foods. London: Hodder & Stoughton. Monk, M.A. 1986. Evidence from macroscopic plant remains for crop husbandry in prehistoric and early historic Ireland: a review. Journal of Irish Archaeology 3, 31–6. O’Connell, M. and Molloy, K. 2001. Farming and woodland dynamics in Ireland during the Neolithic. Biology and environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 101B (1–2), 99–128. Stace, C. 1991. New flora of the British Isles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Tutin, T.G., Heywood, V.H., Burges, N.A., Valentine, D.H., Walters, S.M. and Webb, D.A. 1964–83. Flora Europaea (Volumes 1–6). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 94 Verrill, L. and Tipping, R. 2010. A palynological and geoarchaeological investigation into Bronze Age farming at Belderg Beg, Co. Mayo, Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 1214–1225. Waddell, J. 2000. The prehistoric archaeology of Ireland (second edition). Bray: Wordwell. 95 Part two: Draft Chapters for final volume 96 Soils and Geology Graeme Warren This chapter reviews the soils, geology and geomorphological background to the area. It is essentially complete, but may have some further figures – plates giving views of the landscapes - added This chapter outlines the geology, geomorphology and soils of the region from Annagh Head in the west to Killala Bay in the east. On first encounter, this North Mayo region is a strikingly beautiful, if sometimes stark, landscape seemingly dominated by bog. Whilst the presence of such extensive blanket bog deposits is central to understanding both the archaeology of the region and its modern settlement patterns, a deeper understanding of soils, geology and geomorphology reveals surprising complexities. Figure 1 shows the location of the case study area, and Figure 2 includes some key landscape features. Figure 1: location of case study area Geology The geology of this area is complex, but can be simplified into four main components (Sleeman 1992, Stone 1991) which tell a story of changing sea levels and major geological changes. The rocks generally become younger as we move east along the study area (Figure 3). 97 Figure 2: overview of case study area 98 Figure 3: overview of geological features of case study area 99 The southern two thirds of the Mullet peninsula are part of the Erris complex, mainly gneisses with a small area of more recent rocks to the extreme south. The Erris complex rocks are amongst the oldest in Ireland, with some of those on the Mullet dating back to 1,900 million years ago (mya). Other rocks in this complex range from 1,900 through to 900 – 650 mya. These rocks, which have been significantly transformed by later metamorphism and deformation formed part of an ancient North American continent which was later sundered from comparable rocks in Greenland and NE America by the formation of the Atlantic ocean approximately 200 mya. From the north of the Mullet peninsula eastwards, through Broad Haven Bay and to Glenlassra the underlying rock is Dalradian in age, from the Grampian and Appin groups. Most of the Dalradian rocks were deposited in a shallow sea following c. 750 mya, and they contain evidence for tropical and glacial climates at different times. Following c 590 mya the Dalradian rocks were uplifted into substantial mountains and eroded as the continental plates converged and moved apart. The Grampian group includes the quartzite and psammitic schists that form the spectacular cliffs of this part of the North Mayo Coast, whilst the northern slopes of the arc of mountains from Ben More to Slieve Fyagh immediately to the south of Belderrig and extending west are mainly part of the Appin group of quartzites and psammitic schists (Dalradian), with Carboniferous sandstones forming the southern slopes and the summit of Slieve Fyagh. The complex of archaeological features in Belderrig is associated with the Broadhaven group of quartzites and psammites. Dalradian pelitic schists of the Inver Schist formation are the core of the area studied by Noel Dunne, including the hills of Knocknalower and Dooncarton. The Dalradian rocks also include intrusive Caledonian metadolerites associated with the opening and closing of the Atlantic (c400 mya). These are significant in the Belderrig area, where they are visible through the psammites and quartzites and are associated with massive quartz veins. Metadolerites to the south and south east of Belderrig form a significant part of the Ben More range. East of Glenlassra the region is dominated by Carboniferous sandstones and limestones deposited from c 360 – 325 mya. Sandstones run from Glenlassra to the west of Killala Bay, which is underlain by Carboniferous limestones (the Upper and Lower Ballina Limestone Formation). Some of the Carboniferous sandstones were deposited on a coastal plain by rivers, but the Downpatrick formation provides evidence of the encroaching Lower Carboniferous sea. The Ballina Limestones indicate the deepening of this sea and fully marine conditions. North of Inishcrone, on the Eastern side of Killala Bay these limestones include fossil corals. The Carboniferous limestones include cherts and silicified limestones. These generally soft sedimentary rocks underlie the coastal lowlands and low hills of the Ballycastle – Killala area, including Maumakeogh and form the dramatic Céide cliffs outside the Céide Fields Centre and, most strikingly, at Downpatrick Head. This base geology underlies the main Céide Fields complex and the complexes of field walls and associated structures discovered by Gretta Byrne’s survey work between Ballycastle and Killala Bay. Deglaciation and sea level change The geological background provides the skeleton, but the surface of the North Mayo landscape has been extensively reworked by the actions of ice and other associated processes during millennia of glaciations and deglaciation. The last Ice Age culminated in Ireland being completely covered in an extensive Ice Sheet at about 28-22,000 years ago. As this ice sheet retreated it left a series of 100 distinctive deposits and landscape features in North Mayo. So distinctive are these, that in fact, the retreat of the ice at the end of the last Ice Age in the area has been the subject of long standing research (for example Symes 1881). Hinch (1913) argued that the ‘shelly drift’ exposed at Belderg and Glenulra was deposited by floating ice although later opinion suggests that this was an active ice margin (see below). Models of the late Glacial history of ice in the region vary (Greenwood and Clark 2009a, Greenwood and Clark 2009b, McCabe 2008) but McCabe suggests that the area was last glaciated c. 26,000 cal BC with evidence at Glenulra and Belderrig for ice moving in a NW direction. The ice then retreated and appears to have been followed by a period of significant isostatic depression (depression of the earth’s crust through the weight of the ice) associated with (very) high relative sea level and deposition of a variety of glaciomarine and marine muds, sands and gravels. Glenulra Valley contains a sequence of glaciomarine/marine muds deposited under water at a period of isostatic depression (25-24,000 cal BC). These are found at c. 80m above today’s sea level, implying that the land was 80m below relative sea level at this time. Given that global sea level was c. 130m below present day sea levels because of the very substantial bodies of water caught up in ice sheets in the Late Glacial, this implies an isostatic depression of c. 210m. Following this period of massive isostatic depression and hence local relative high sea levels, there is evidence for the readvance of the ice. The Belderg shelly drift is now argued to be derived from ice proximal sedimentation from tide water glaciers, followed by ice berg zone mud (McCabe 2008, McCabe, Clark, and Clark 2005): i.e. the area was underwater at the margins of an ice sheet. This dates to approximately 17,000 BC and again indicates considerable isostatic depression, with relative sea level being hypothesised as c 20-30m above present (McCabe 2008, 250). Ice may then have retreated again, and the last major advance of ice in the region was the Killard Point Stadial (c 13,500 cal BC). At this time McCabe reconstructs the Ice Sheet margin as lying at or just beyond the western edge of Killala Bay or Lacken Strand, oriented approximately NNE/SSW, and therefore lying immediately to the east of our primary study areas. The story of deglaciation is important for our region. The ice shaped the hills and valleys of this region over millennia, depositing tills and moving materials across the landscape – some of which were to be important resources following colonisation by people. The area has been ice free for a considerable period of time, although parts of the region were inundated by the sea at different points in this sequence. The deposition of marine muds and gravels in specific parts of the landscape is significant, and creates small pockets of variable resources and soils. Sea level Sea level changes continued long after the immediate retreat of Ice from the Belderrig area, reflecting global sea level change due to ice melt (glacio-eustacy) and local rebound following the removal of Ice masses. The interplay of these processes is complex, and unfortunately, there is no radiocarbon data available on Holocene (post-glacial) sea level in the North Mayo area (Brooks and Edwards 2006), but general models (Brooks et al. 2008) suggest that relative sea levels have consistently risen in the region due. These models suggest that early in the Holocene (which began 9,700 cal BC) sea levels in the region were about 20 metres below present day, and these have since 101 risen. Due to greater isostatic rebound to the east due to its proximity to the centre of Ice accumulation relative sea level has changed less in this area. According to these models, at approximately 4000 BC, relative sea level at Killala Bay was about -3m and in Belmullet -5m. Intertidal peats at Blacksod Bay and Killala Bay demonstrate the innundation of ancient landscape by the rising sea. The impact of this vertical sea level rise on the location of the coast line is harder to assess, as erosion and shoreline migration are hard to reconstruct. In areas of hard coast – the high rocky cliffs that dominate much of the North Mayo coast for example – the sea level change will have made no difference to the location of the shoreline, beyond the impact of thousands of years of cliff erosion. However, in areas of soft sediment, sea level rise will have also involved coastal erosion and, potentially, the redeposition of material, making the precise reconstruction of prehistoric shorelines very difficult. In areas such as the Mullet peninsula the comparatively gentle topography means that small sea level rises could have drowned comparatively large areas and ancient shore lines may lie some distance off the modern coast. River processes This coast line includes a number of significant rivers. The extensive Glenamoy basin includes two main rivers: the Glenamoy and the Muingnabo which trend west. Further east, the rivers of the North Mayo coast flow south to north: the Belderg River, Glenlassra River and Glenulra River. The Glenlassra and Glenulra rivers are hanging valleys, exiting on high cliffs. At Ballycastle, the Ballinglen River flows into Banatrahir Bay, along with the Bellananaminnaun River at the west of this Bay. To the east the Cloonalaghan River flows into Lackan Bay, overlooked by Lackan Hill. Killala bay is primarily fed by the River Moy, and the estuary is associated with complex shifting sand banks, bars and islands. In keeping with many parts of Ireland, little is known about the details of river development in the case study area (Brown et al. 2007, Turner et al. 2010). The Glenamoy River is associated with significant alluvial deposits and small scale investigations carried out by Davis, Warren and Turner near the mouth of the Belderg river have indicated that c4.8m of sediment has been deposited since 375-175 cal BC (UBA-8287, 2195±35 bp). This suggests that, in some places at least, significant landscape change may have taken place in terms of river activity. A deeper understanding of how rivers have changed over time would be extremely helpful. Soils The modern soils of the region are dominated by high and low level blanket peat which extends along most of the North Mayo coast. This has a very limited range of potential agricultural uses, and today they are dominated by rough grazing (Gardiner and Radford 1980). This blanket peat has been extensively used for peat cutting, mainly by hand, but with significant recent use of mechanised extrusion technologies in recent years. Some small pockets of wet and dry podzols are also present in river valleys in these extensive peat lands (Associations 155/185p) (??) and these support slightly more intensive grazing. 102 Figure 4: major landuse categories. Data source EPA. Peat development in this region began in prehistory and has a complex relationship with human activity (see passim for detailed discussion). To the west of Belderrig varied dates on peats and trees within peats suggest that peat formation had begun in the early post-glacial period, and the absence of archaeological materials from the Glenamoy Basin is argued to demonstrate that peat was present from early prehistoric times (Caulfield, O’Donnell, and Mitchell 1998). Recent work on Achill Island (Caseldine et al. 2005) confirms the early date for peat initiation in some other locations in the Atlantic west. Recent work in Belderrig (see below) is demonstrating considerable complexity in the timing and extent of peat growth even within small areas and caution is needed in extrapolating data from one location to another. The Mullet peninsula includes pockets of gleys (174), and extensive windblown sands (5) to the west; these are also found on the east of Blacksod and Broadhaven Bay. The wind-blown sands are comparatively recent deposits, related to rising sea levels in the region and strong Atlantic gales. To the east, the region from Ballycastle to Killala Bay is dominated by degraded grey-brown podzolics (Soil Association 32) formed from calcareous gravelly loam tills of Carboniferous limestones. They are generally well drained. Soils of this association have a limited range of potential uses for modern agriculture; it is moderately suitable to cultivation today. The association is varied spatially (see above for discussion of varied glaciomarine and marine sediments underlying these soils), and this has limits the use of machinery, meaning that much of the area is in grassland. Pockets of gleys lie to the west of this association, giving way to blanket peat. The hills of the upland are between Lackan and Ballycastle see a return to blanket bog and associated peaty gleys. 103 Comparatively little is known about the pre-bog soils of North Mayo. A crude distinction may have existed between soils developed over Carboniferous lime- and sandstones and those on the Dalradian and older rock to the west, with the Carboniferous areas likely to have had higher quality soils with better drainage and productivity. However, this will have been moderated by the tills, glacio-marine and marine muds and other superficial deposits consequent upon deglaciation. Variation at a small scale is likely to have been significant, and exposure to winds important in determining farming potential. 104 References ?? Soil Map of West Mayo. Brooks, A., and R. Edwards. 2006. The Development of a Sea-Level Database for Ireland. Irish Journal of Earth Sciences 24, 13–27. Brooks, A. J., S. L. Bradley, R. J. Edwards, G. A. Milne, B. Horton, and I. Shennan. 2008. Postglacial relative sea-level observations from Ireland and their role in glacial rebound modelling. Journal of Quaternary Science 23, 175-192. Brown, A. G., G. Aalbersberg, M. Thorp, and P. Glanville. 2007. Alluvial Geoarchaeology in Ireland, in E. M. Murphy and N. J. Whitehouse (Eds). Environmental Archaeology in Ireland, pp. 241258. Oxford: Oxbow. Caseldine, C., G. Thompson, C. Langdon, and D. Hendon. 2005. Evidence for an extreme climatic event on Achill Island, Co. Mayo, Ireland around 5200–5100 cal. yr BP. Journal of Quaternary Science 20, 169–178. Caulfield, S., R. G. O’Donnell, and P. I. Mitchell. 1998. 14C Dating of a Neolithic Field System at Céide Fields, County Mayo, Ireland. Radiocarbon 40, 629-640. Gardiner, M. J., and T. Radford 1980. Soil Associations of Ireland and Their Land Use Potential: Explanatory Bulletin to Soil Map of Ireland 1980 Dublin: An Foras Talúntais. Greenwood, S. L., and C. D. Clark. 2009a. Reconstructing the last Irish Ice Sheet 1: changing flow geometries and ice flow dynamics deciphered from the glacial landform record. Quaternary Science Reviews 28, 3085-3100. —. 2009b. Reconstructing the last Irish Ice Sheet 2: a geomorphologically-driven model of ice sheet growth, retreat and dynamics. Quaternary Science Reviews 28, 3101-3123. Hinch, J. d. W. 1913. The shelly drift of Glenulra and Belderrig, Co. Mayo. Irish Naturalist 22, 1-6. McCabe, A. M. 2008. Glacial Geology and Geomorphology: the Landscapes of Ireland. Edinburgh: Dunedin. McCabe, A. M., P. U. Clark, and J. Clark. 2005. AMS 14C dating of deglacial events in the Irish Sea Basin and other sectors of the British–Irish ice sheet. Quaternary Science Reviews 24, 16731690. Sleeman, A. G. Editor. 1992. Geology of North Mayo: a geological description to accompany the bedrock geology 1:100,000 map series: Sheet 6, North Mayo. Dublin: Geological Survey of Ireland. Stone, J. J. 1991. North Mayo - Regional Geology, in P. Coxon (Eds). Fieldguide to the Quaternary of North Mayo, pp. 4 - 24. Dublin: Irish Association for Quaternary Studies. Symes, R. G., Traill, W.A, McHenry, A. 1881. Explanatory Memoir to Accompany Sheets 39, 40, 51, 52 and Northern Portion of 62 of the Maps of the Geological Survey of Ireland, including the country around Belmullet, Bangor, Corick, Belderg and Portacloy, and the Islands of Inishkea, Inishglora and Duvillaun. Dublin: HMSO. Turner, J. N., M. G. Macklin, A. F. Jones, and H. Lewis. 2010. New perspectives on Holocene flooding in Ireland using meta-analysis of fluvial radiocarbon dates. Catena 82, 183-190. 105 History of Archaeological and Related Research in North Mayo Seamas Caulfield This draft chapter reviews the history of research into the pre-bog archaeology of the region from the nineteenth century into the twenty-first century. Further work is required in terms of illustrations, editing and the relationship with other chapters of the volume as a whole. Introduction Formal research into the prehistory of North Mayo and related environmental change has its roots over a century ago but observations on both natural phenomena and archaeological monuments go back over half a century earlier. In 1841 a clergyman the Rev. Caesar Otway made very interesting comments on the stumps of pine trees which he had observed along the Glenamoy river. ‘I had an opportunity to remark along the boggy banks............that immense roots of the bog fir trees as they spread their horizontal limbs on every side and reposed not on the gravel below the bog, but on the bog itself...............there was as much bog under them as over them...............I observed as in other places, from five to eight feet of bog below the roots that with their stems set horizontally as there they had grown, there made a large and flourishing tree and there by some sudden process had been destroyed. .............The roots are always horizontal, they are always at the same line of depth they in fact seem to have grown where they now are and the difficulty is to account for how the underlying bog was formed, how such large timber could grow in bog and how it was subsequently overthrown; for experience shows us that by no present means that we may use can fir trees of any species be got to grow to any size upon the bog let us drain it or improve it how we may. ....Hence I am led to come to the conclusion at any rate that some great change in the climate and character of the country took place when it ceased to be a pine-growing country’(Otway 1841,341). Caesar Otway’s acute observation of the significance of the location of the pine roots in, not under the bog touches on one of the fundamental issues of ongoing research one hundred and seventy years later – the phenomenon of the synchronous pines as a manifestation of climate changes. There is a further observation in the use of bogs and pine trees to identify sea level inundation of the land. Otway’s local informant from the Mullet peninsula told him ...’there are bogs and bog timbers below the sands and under where the sea always flows ....... there was a ship stranded not long ago on the sandy beach off Terraun Point; in order to raise her or at any rate to save her timbers the people dug all around her during the ebb of a spring tide and cutting as they did down through the sand and where the sea came in on them so that their labour was in vain, yet still at the bottom they found nothing but bog and large pieces of bog fir’. A coastguard in the company verified the phenomenon. ‘I have often seen in Blacksod Bay of a clear day fathoms down the roots of trees that seemed of the same sort as what are every day dug out of our bogs’(Otway 1841,80). 106 The first scientific paper on late glacial phenomena was published by Hinch in 1913. His study of the Belderg and Glenulra shelly drift, on the landward side of the road to the pier in Belderrig and beside the bridge in Glenulra valley established the marine context of the glacial deposit (Hinch 1913). Archaeological Research The recognition of pre-bronze Age archaeological remains in North Mayo was confined to an awareness of the megalithic remains in Ballyglass townland. Here again a local informant of Caesar Otway gives a folk narrative of an incident involving the tomb which may be closer to the perception of the structure by its original builders than is normally found in modern interpretations by archaeologists. Interest in megalithic structures other than Passage Tombs was very limited and the main impetus in the 1930s came from the Belfast based Oliver Davies and Estyn Evans. In geographical terms the closest research to the North Mayo area was Hencken’s excavation of the megalithic tomb at Creevykeel in Co. Sligo (Hencken 1939). When the late Professor Ruaidhrí de Valéra took up the study of megalithic tombs, his initial research for a post-graduate degree was a study of the megaliths of Co. Clare. His later interest in the work of the Belfast researchers led him to question the evidence of a lone tomb at Ballyglass. His instinct was that the tomb was too isolated from the nearest neighbouring tombs in Co. Sligo. He came to the Ballycastle area to enquire from local knowledge if other ‘giants’ graves’ existed in the area. The result of his fieldtrip was the discovery of over a dozen megalithic tombs between Killala Bay and the smaller Bunatrahir Bay on the North Mayo coast (de Valéra 1951). Megalithic tombs were considered to be intimately connected with the spread of farming and the first occurrence of pottery and other Neolithic artifacts. The entire Neolithic period was thought to be as short as two centuries. A major issue of debate arose in regard to the line of evolution of these longcairned megaliths. Had their builders entered Ireland on the east coast and spread westwards with their horned facades developing deeper and deeper facades as the tomb builders spread westwards, ending up as so-called “lobster claw cairns”. Piggott’s (1954) The Neolithic Cultures of the British Isles proposed the Clyde Carlingford culture as seen in the long cairn tombs of both islands with entry around Carlingford and a fanning out of the farmer communities from there. It was also proposed that the primary area of colonisation was likely to have a high level of uniformity with divergence from the norm indicating later evolution. De Valéra’s (1959) study of the “Court Cairns of Ireland”, his doctoral thesis sought to reverse Piggott’s Clyde Carlingford sequence by arguing that if density of distribution was indicative of primary focus of entry, coupled with standardised form, then a western origin with two rather than three-chamber gallery and with full lobster claw as the norm was more likely. He proposed that Bunatrahir Bay on the west rather than Carlingford Lough on the east was the most likely point of entry. The debate took place at a time when the Neolithic of Ireland and Britain was thought to be no more than two to four centuries in duration, so that the process of colonising the island by farmers could be seen to occupy a significant portion of that time. One long term result of the de Valéra thesis was the acceptance of the lobster claw as the primary form by the general acceptance of the term ‘Court Cairn’ for the tomb type. In de Valéra’s early research in North Mayo he had been taken to see “The Roomeens”, a megalithic structure of three cruciform chambers completely encased in two metres of bog on the middle slopes of Céide hill in Behy townland. The cruciform layout of the chambers which at that time was 107 associated only with Passage Tombs in Ireland led de Valéra and Ó Nualláin to publish an article on the tomb identifying it as Passage Tomb (de Valéra and Ó Nualláin,1952). They noted however some anomalous features both within the tomb structure and in its siting and location. Structural detail such as the jamb and sill segmentation at the eastern end of the main chamber was more suggestive of a court tomb. The isolated location, at some distance from the passage tomb cemeteries of Sligo but in particular its siting on the middle slopes of Céide hill was recognised as unusual for a passage tomb and much more the expected location of a court tomb. During the 1950s continuing research by de Valéra and Ó Nualláin on Volume 2 of the Megalithic Survey (de Valéra and Ó Nualláin 1964) led to the recognition that some court tombs had one or more chambers opening off the main gallery of chambers. They came to the conclusion that the Behy tomb was not a passage tomb as originally identified but was instead the prime example of a small group of those court tombs with transeptal chambers. In 1963, in collaboration with Professor Michael Herity of the Archaeology Department in UCD they excavated to the east of the chambers in the Behy tomb in the expectation that they would find a rectangular rather than circular cairn and that they would find a court rather than passage at this location, both of which predictions were borne out. Apart from de Valéra’s desire to put his western entry theory to the test of the spade he saw the Behy excavation as contributing to an understanding of his theories on the essential unity of the whole long barrow tradition in earth and stone. De Valéra’s extreme megalithic unionist view saw a common origin on mainland Europe and a cousinly relationship between the megaliths of the Severn Cotswold area and the court tombs of Ireland(de Valéra 1965). The fact that many of the Severn Cotswold tombs possessed transepted chambers in long cairns led de Valéra to conclude that this feature was an early international feature introduced into Ireland and lost at an early stage before the expansion of the farming communities from the initial area of colonisation. Because de Valéra argued for a western entry for court tomb builders he saw the geographically confined transepted sites as early examples still manifesting international form which was lost before expansion of the farmer builders out of the west. The Behy tomb as the best example of the international tradition and sealed by two metres of bog was an obvious choice to test the thesis. Excavations were begun in 1963 and the eastern end of the cairn was exposed and as anticipated, a court leading directly into the burial chambers was revealed. The de Valéra thesis of the cousinly relationship with the Severn Cotswold tombs was strengthened by the fact that the court was constructed of small stone dry walling rather than of the expected orthostats. Over the collapsed facade on the left side of the court a stratigraphically later rubble stone wall overlay the cairn collapse and ran eastwards towards the uncut bog. During the 1963 excavation while on a field trip to Belderrig valley seven kilometres west of the Behy tomb, the writer’s father, Patrick Caulfield showed the excavation team the Belderrig ‘stone circle’ and associated stone walls in its vicinity in an area of cutaway bog. In 1934 Patrick Caulfield had written to the National Museum bringing to the attention of the Director, Dr. Adolf Mahr, the megalithic remains, pre-bog stone walls and ancient quernstones found in bogs in the Belderrig area. Mahr replied and while he made no reference to the pre-bog walls and indicated that quernstones without decoration were of little interest to the Museum, he made the prescient observation that ‘it is especially the cromlech beneath the bog which may turn out to be extremely important and everything should be done to keep them undisturbed until that date at which a scientific examination can be made of them’. 108 Also in the summer of 1963, fifty kilometres to the south of Behy, at Carrownaglogh near Bonnyconlon at the foot of the Ox Mountains, a local postman, Tommy Togher had noted a sizeable stone wall where he had cut his turf. He discovered a very large flint scraper in the wall and sent it to the National Museum. Peter Danagher, then assistant keeper in the National Museum visited the site and from there continued on to visit the Behy excavation. Herity, close friend and colleague of Peter Danagher returned with him to Carrownaglogh where he met with Tommy Togher and saw the pre-bog walls. Visitors to the excavations at the Behy tomb accustomed to walking over cutaway bog and interested in what the pre-bog surface revealed had observed the walls at various locations between the road and the tomb 400 metres upslope into the bog. De Valéra and Ó Nualláin’s single minded focus on the megalithic tomb saw the wall on the collapsed cairn as obviously stratigraphically later and separated possibly by millennia from their focus of study. Herity was particularly interested in investigating further the Behy stone wall but the other directors of the excavation were not supportive of the idea. It was recognised during that summer from the Behy, Belderrig and Carrownaglogh discoveries that pre-bog walls were a more widespread phenomenon than previously thought. In 1967 Herity proposed that he and the writer should undertake a study of the phenomenon. In 1969 a programme of excavation of the pre-bog walls commenced at two locations, Herity at Carrownaglogh and the writer on the walls in the vicinity of the Behy tomb. Archaeological excavations in the North Mayo area were well established by this stage. Ó Nualláin had excavated the small Ballyglass tomb(Mayo 14) in 1967 and was into his second season at the large Ballyglass (Mayo 13). During the excavation of the walls in 1969, a reconnoitre of the cutaway bog with Patrick Caulfield led to the identification of partly exposed enclosures in the cutaway bog. In 1970 it was decided to excavate one of these enclosures sited about 300 metres to the east of the Behy tomb just across the townland boundary in Glenulra townland. It was already obvious from the recce of Céide hill that the field walls were much more extensive than had been thought, creating the problem of where to identify within the fields, potential concentrations of human activity which could lead to artifact or other critically diagnostic phenomena. The confines of an enclosure - for whatever purpose – offered the best opportunity. The western half of the enclosure was excavated in the summer of 1970. No internal structure was observed but some flint artifacts and a polished chip of stone identified as probably from a stone axe were recovered. In the same season five kilometres to the east, Ó Nualláin’s third season of excavation at Ballyglass had discovered the foundation trenches of a large house which underlay and therefore predated the tomb(Ó Nualláin 19xx). The discovery of the Ballyglass house was very important at the time. It was the most substantial Neolithic house known from Britain or Ireland and only a handful of houses of the period were known. In Ireland the only parallels known were Knockadoon on Lough Gur and Ballinagilly in Co. Tyrone. It was also the only polycameral house identified in these islands. The discovery gave rise to considerable interest among the general public. An open day held on the 15 August 1970 attracted a crowd of over one thousand from throughout the county and further afield despite a deluge and severe flooding. In 1971, Herity’s second season of excavation led to the discovery of cultivation ridges on the prebog surface, the prime breakthrough that had been hoped for of being able to identify the purpose of the fields. Again the discovery caused widespread interest.. 109 The second season of excavation of the Glenulra enclosure entailed the removal of the uncut bank of turf over much of this part of the site. During the 1970 season some small densely concentrated pockets of tiny quartz chips had been noted in the soil immediately under the peat. In 1971 after some dry and very sunny days one of these concentrations was seen to have dried out and was recognisable as a sherd of very degraded pottery. Once identified some further sherds of Neolithic pottery and degraded pottery were recovered. The most important result of the season’s fieldwork did not come from the excavation but in the weeks immediately following. Turf cutting for fuel over a number of generations had removed the overlying bog from almost one square kilometre of Céide hill, the equivalent of many millions of pounds worth of archaeological excavation. On completion of the season’s excavation the writer and one of the undergraduate assistants on the excavation, now Dr. Brian Dornan, mapped the field boundaries exposed in the cutaway bogs in Behy and Glenulra townlands which resulted in the drawing up of the original map of the Behy/Glenulra field system(Caulfield 1978). The initial survey led to two conclusions which remain valid today. Firstly the Behy/Glenulra field system was laid out as a series of long parallels divided by cross walls into large fields and appear to be contemporary with the enclosure . This conclusion is based on the fact that neither the enclosure nor the wall nearby has been robbed out, something one would expect if they were not contemporary. Secondly, the walls seem to have been built to create enclosed pasture for cattle. Both the size of the individual fields and the overall size of the field system indicated pasture though this did not rule out the possibility of small tillage plots within the larger fields. The Belderrig Valley Research: Belderg Beg Excavations. Dire economic circumstances in autumn 1971 led to a government initiative to expend €30 million on labour as rapidly as possible with archaeological excavations seen as an ideal medium for this as it had been since 1933. The problem for academic archaeologists was that the work had to start promptly and to be completed by end of March which ruled out student participation or full time involvement by lecturing staff. Herity’s discovery of the cultivation ridges at Carrownaglogh had shown that early farming practices within the field boundaries could be recovered. The windswept bleak hillside at Behy/Glenulra and the size of the fields made Céide hill an unlikely candidate for the discovery of prehistoric cultivation practices. It was decided to turn attention to the stone walls on the western side of Belderrig valley in Belderg Beg townland, a much more sheltered location. A project was proposed to employ twelve local workmen for ten weeks under the day to day supervision of Patrick Caulfield to uncover the stone walls about which he had written to the National Museum in 1934. The writer travelled from University College Dublin at the weekends and by re-scheduling lectures with colleagues was able to extend the visits to be there for Friday and or Monday working day. The local workforce was fully briefed about what had been discovered at the Glenulra enclosure but it was not expected to recover artifacts and certainly not pottery at this phase of the work. Yet within two weeks one of the workmen, Micheál O Malley had identified and recovered early Neolithic pottery which remains as the most intact vessel found during the years of excavation. The Glenulra excavation was completed at Easter 1972 and the first full season of excavation at Belderg Beg commenced that summer. Half the “stone circle” was excavated and it quickly emerged that the circle of stones was part of an outer bank of earth and stone of a large circular house with 110 the earth for the bank coming from a wide ditch dug outside. The most significant discovery given the purpose of the excavations was a small spread of charcoal with a long V of the charcoal extending from it in the subsoil, the first discovery of prehistoric ard marks in the country. The typical pattern of two sets of ard marks at right angles to one another indicating cross ploughing was visible in the subsoil. Later expansion of this area of ploughing led to the fortuitous discovery of cultivation ridges similar to those found at Carrownaglogh and which in places overlay the ard marks. This raised an issue at the time: were the ridges an early example of rig and furrow meaning that the primitive ard was capable of moving the soil sufficiently to form the ridges. If this was so, rig and furrow cultivation could no longer be seen as requiring the Roman plough. By the end of the 1972 season there was significant interest in the research programme though this was mainly by archaeologists from abroad where research into early agriculture was much more developed than in Ireland. Professor Bernard Wailes, based at University of Pennsylvania arranged for the Radiocarbon dating of samples by the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC which provided the first series of dates from the early farming sites. The most significant of these dates was the Neolithic date for the Glenulra enclosure, the terminus ante quem date for a pine tree growing in peat close by a pre-bog wall and a number of dates which indicated second millennium re-occupation of the site, a phase to which the round house and a wall built on peat were dated. Excavations were carried out over a number of seasons on various features of the Belderg Beg site from 1972 to the final season in 1982 (Caulfield 1983). Given the extent of the finds in the initial season, there was a marked scarcity of artifacts in later years and despite the archaeological and Radiocarbon evidence for Neolithic settlement no dwelling structure was identified. The 1976 season which concentrated on the excavation of the enclosure which had been partly robbed out by the second millennium re-occupation of the site was particularly disappointing in regards to both internal structure and artifacts. The eighties marked a further extension of the research when students who had worked on the project as undergraduates at both Belderg Beg and Céide Fields were invited to carry out research on blocks of the North Mayo region for their postgraduate theses. The two principal assistants over the years at Céide Fields, Gretta Byrne and Noel Dunne undertook two major blocks which form sections of this report. Others who undertook significant research were Michael McDonagh, Margaret Keane, Antonine Healy and Karl Brady. Other major archaeological work carried out in the early 1990s was a probed survey of the very extensive but irregular field boundaries on the eastern side of Belderrig valley in Belderg More townland. In the 1970s, Telefís Éireann, the national television station produced a weekly farming programme. In 1973 they made a documentary programme entitled “The First Farmers” based on the recent research at Carrownaglogh, Behy/Glenulra and Belderrig. The documentary attracted a very wide audience because it had not been made as an archaeological programme but as a straightforward farming programme which happened to be about farming five thousand years ago. The documentary was also very important for the long term success of the North Mayo research in introducing the presenter of the programme, till then acquainted with the contemporary world of farming, to the world of farming in the past. The presenter, Professor Martin Downes, then on a career break from the world of academia remains associated with the project and became the main link between the archaeological world of the humanities and the world of science. His 111 communication skills have played a very big part in the later developments of the research in taking the findings to a wider public and to the decision makers in the later development of the project. Archaeological excavation and research has continued in Belderrig valley in recent years with a new programme of research into an earlier pre-farming settlement of fisher-gatherers on a low cliff edge overlooking the seashore in Belderg More townland. The research work is led by Dr. Graeme Warren on a site originally identified by Patrick Caulfield. Apart from its significance as the major late Mesolithic site identified west of the Shannon it may emerge as central to an understanding of the subsequent settlement of the valley because of the virtually contiguous Neolithic walls (Warren 2009). Scientific Research associated with the Archaeological Projects. From the initial excavations at the Behy tomb in 1963, the potential of the bogland location was seen as significant for pollen analysis and Radiocarbon dating. The first dates were received from the Belfast Radiocarbon Laboratory. Professor John Moore of the Botany Department in UCD carried out some early pollen analysis in which he identified a ‘landnam’ phase in deeper bog to the west which he examined. Another result of his preliminary work on pollen analysis at Behy was in recognising the dominance of pine in the arboreal pollen(Moore 1979). Professor Martin Downes investigated the potential of the pine stumps for tree-ring analysis in the 1970s. At the time the thrust of the tree-ring analysis in Belfast was to complete and extend the dendrochronological sequence as a calibration for Radiocarbon dating and there was little interest in site-specific or short sequence ring matching. The work demonstrated the potential for identifying the direction of spread of the trees onto the bog. The pine phase in the bogs of North Mayo, first commented on by Otway marks such a significant change in the botanical record that it should be recognisable even where the tree stumps do not survive. The fact that pine pollen is one of the larger pollens and most readily identifiable led Downes to develop a rapid method of seeking the pine peak in the bogs with a view to using it as a chronological marker. Ms. Antonine Healy undertook the application of the method on Céide Fields for her M.A. thesis in 1992. In 1991, as part of the ongoing research into Céide Fields, Dr. Karen Molloy of the Palaeoecology Laboratory in NUIG was commissioned to carry out pollen analysis in the area. This research was expanded to a more extensive research project on Céide Fields in association with Professor Michael O’Connell of the same Laboratory which led to the definitive publication of the long sequence monolith from a deep very confined bog basin in Glenulra townland(Molloy and O’Connell 1995). The monolith indicated a ‘landnam phenomenon of herbaceous replacement of arboreal dominance with grassland dominant for a relatively short period. The pollen analysis also showed sporadic farming activity in the millennia after the main occupation of the fields, something which could be expected given that parts of the fields had very limited growth of bog in some places. A controversial addendum to the report which proposed an alternative interpretation of the archaeology of the field boundaries does not diminish the important contribution which the primary botanical analysis has provided for the nature and duration of the period of main occupation of the fields. The Radiocarbon dates associated with the Glenulra peat monolith are in agreement with the 112 dates from the macrofossil remains and from the archaeological material that the main occupation of Céide Fields was in the middle of the fourth millennium BC. In 1988 an exhibition of ongoing research projects throughout UCD led to collaborative research between Professor Peter Mitchell and Dr. Rory O’Donnell of the Experimental Physics Department and the Céide Fields research project. The Radiocarbon equipment was used to date many of the pine trees in the bogs overlying Céide Fields and Belderrig field systems and numerous other locations in North Mayo. The series of dates provided for the North Mayo pine trees confirmed the broadly synchronous nature of these trees as originally commented on by Otway. They also confirm the general indication that the bog in which the majority of the dated trees grew was established by 3000 BC and that the wall boundaries beneath must date to the fourth millennium BC at the latest (Caulfield et al. 1998). In 1996 Dr. Lisa Doyle who had worked on the Céide Fields project as an undergraduate undertook a pollen and tephra analysis at two locations, one on the Belderg Beg excavation and the second in Geevraun townland about 400 metres to the west beside a peat monolith and pine stump for which Radiocarbon dates had been obtained. The North Mayo Research and the Public From the first Open Day on 15 August 1970 it was always the policy of the archaeologists involved to communicate with the wider public through on site visits and through the media. Articles in the local and national press brought the significance of the discoveries to the general public despite the fact that visually even the minor part of the monument which could be seen was about as uninteresting as a collapsed stone wall can be. In 1972 the television programme The First Farmers was broadcast on Telefís Éireann as it then was titled and the visual impact of the scenery combined with the story of the roots of Irish farming led to increased visitor numbers in North Mayo. In the latter half of the eighties, European funding was being made available for the construction of interpretative centres to manage and increase visitor numbers at key heritage sites throughout the country. A request to national government that Céide Fields be considered for funding was rejected on the legitimate grounds that a location which was attracting relatively small numbers of tourists did not require an interpretative centre to manage those tourists. An appeal to local government in Co. Mayo received a much more positive response. An initial grant of £40,000 made available by the County Development Team was matched by local fundraising of 50,000 and a further £40,000 from the County Council itself created an Irish fund of close to £130,000. European funding of 75% now left a project of half a million pounds ready to be developed by autumn 1988. The project was subsequently encouraged to be increased to £2.5 million with the understanding that external funding of almost £2 million would be available though this was subsequently reduced to half that amount. By summer 1990 the scaling back of the project was causing much disappointment but a visit by the Taoiseach Charles Haughey led to the involvement of national government and the acceptance of responsibility for the development of the project by the Office of Public Works. Three years later Céide Fields interpretative centre was opened in an award winning building designed in house in the Office of Public Works, only the second occasion ever that the Office had received the Triennial Gold Medal of the RIAI. The Céide Fields development project had got great support at immediately local and county level and this continued after the responsibility for the project was taken over by the Office of Public 113 Works. During the 1980s the cities of Galway, Cork and Dublin had marked significant historical dates by celebrating the 500, 800 and millennium years in the three cities. The writer proposed to Mayo County Council that a rural county with roots extending back for at least five thousand years should designate 1993 as ‘Mayo 5000’ to celebrate five thousand years of rural settlement which continues to be the dominant form of settlement in the county. The Council agreed and a promotional programme and a series of events were organised throughout the county. Many of the events throughout the county were of a one-off local nature but a number, briefly described below had a wider and more far reaching effect. An Post agreed to issue a commemorative stamp to mark the opening of Céide Fields and the artist Charles Roycroft succeeded in accommodating a view of the fields and the North Mayo coastline, the detailed plan of four square kilometres of the site, a cross-section of the bog and the chronology all within the confines of the postage stamp. An international sculpture symposium was held over a period of three weeks where sculptors working with the aid of local volunteers and social employment workers created fifteen pieces of earth and stone construction throughout North Mayo. In keeping with the non-nucleated settlement pattern of Céide Fields the creations were not all created in a sculpture park but instead were widely dispersed throughout North Mayo. Because the symposium was established as part of the celebration of the Mayo 5000 it was a condition of the tenders for participation that the proposed creation should have the potential to survive for another five thousand years, which is why earth and stone construction was specified. In order to highlight the opening of Céide Fields in early summer 1993 it was decided that one of the highlights of the Mayo 5000 celebration should be the performance of a specially commissioned symphony ‘The Spirit of Mayo’ in the National Concert Hall in Dublin. The symphony was preceded by a traditional concert of Irish music and dance. The symphony was composed by Bill Whelan, dancers included Michael Flatley and Jean Butler, among the singers and musicians were Anúna and Davy Spillane and the concert was produced by John McColgan of Abhainn Productions. Within a month of the concert in June 1993 Moya Doherty of Abhainn Productions was asked to produce the Eurovision Contest being held in Dublin in Spring 1994. Putting the same performers ‘on the centre stage of Eurovision’ Doherty created a ten minute interval act called Riverdance and in their own words ‘the rest is history’. The achievement of securing a major interpretative centre for Céide Fields and the celebration of Mayo 5000 was not without its disappointments. The original project had envisaged the provision of a regional display area and facilities for study and ongoing research. Unfortunately costs dictated that these elements had to be excised and the structure functions as an interpretative centre for general tourism. It was eventually decided to seek a basic research and study facility in Belderrig and again the County Council with the County Vocational Education Committee with the writer, Martin Downes and a local Belderrig committee succeeded in securing a grant of half a million pounds in 1998 on the recommendation of the then Minister for Science and Technology, Mr. Noel Treacy. This provided two basic laboratories, one for science and one for archaeological research and another general purpose building for conferences and meetings which also functions as a Belderrig community centre. 114 New Research and Researchers Over the last decade, new research projects have been carried out in the Belderrig area. Dr. Lucy Verrill completed her doctorate in Edinburgh University on the analysis of the soils and pollen of the Belderg Beg farm site. Other research by Dr. Erica Guttmann Bond on the Neolithic soils at Céide Fields and Belderg Beg is to be published in the near future. Verrill and Dr. Richard Tipping have published on the Bronze Age farm at Belderg Beg (Verrill and Tipping 2010). When the writer retired from the Department of Archaeology in University College Dublin in 2000 it severed the strong direct link between research by members and students of the Department and North Mayo which had started with Professor de Valéra and had lasted for almost half a century. The appointment of Dr. Graeme Warren to the staff of the Department, now the School of Archaeology, whose main research interest was in the Mesolithic period provided an opportunity to introduce him to the site at the seashore in Belderrig. In an eroding gully at the low gravel cliffs on the east side of Belderrig harbour Patrick Caulfield had noted the high concentration of chipped quartz and some other struck pieces. Professor Peter Woodman had confirmed the Late Mesolithic assemblage on a visit some years previously. Warren’s excavation of the site in Belderg More townland has yielded and enormous quantity of late Mesolithic, mainly quartz artefacts with fishbone and hazelnut surviving and dating to the fifth millennium BC. Earlier research on the field systems in Belderg More townland had located walls in close proximity to the Mesolithic site on the cliff edge. Warren’s excavation trench running inland from the cliff site intercepted one of these walls within metres of the Mesolithic material. The Warren research programme has led to significant spin-off research with Killian Driscoll completing his doctoral thesis on the quartz material from the Belderg More excavation. The potential of Belderrig valley to provide a sharply focussed picture of environmental conditions and change over the period of the Mesolithic Neolithic transition/replacement has led to collaborative research between Warren, Dr. Steve Davis and Dr. Naomi Holmes into late glacial and post glacial lake deposits at the southern end of Belderrig valley five kilometres from the seashore. Surprisingly early Radiocarbon dates and the crinoid evidence raise issues about the limits and nature of glaciation in North Mayo. In the last two years, research by Davis on a small lake in Belderg Beg townland close by the excavated fields and within a kilometre of the seashore has yielded an environmental sequence which commences before the Mesolithic settlement and continues to the present. 115 Bibliography Caulfield, S. 1978. Neolithic Fields: The Irish Evidence. pp. 137-143 in H.C. Bowen and P.J. Fowler (eds.) Early Land Allotment. British Archaeological Reports 48. Caulfield, S. 1983. The Neolithic Settlement of North Connaught. pp.195-215 in T. Reeves-Smyth and F. Hamond (eds.) Landscape Archaeology in Ireland. British Archaeological Reports 116. Caulfield, S.,O’Donnell, R.G. and Mitchell, P.I. 1998. 14C Dating of a Neolithic Field System at Céide Fields, County Mayo, Ireland. Radiocarbon 40, 629-640. de Valéra, R. 1951. A Group of ‘Horned Cairns’ near Ballycastle, Co. Mayo. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 81, 161-197. de Valéra, R. 1960. The Court Cairns of Ireland. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 60C, 9-140. de Valéra, R. 1965. Transeptal Court Cairns. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 95, 5-37. de Valéra,R. and Ó Nualláin,S. 1952. Journal of the Galway Historical and Archaeological Society 25, 47-51. de Valéra,R. and Ó Nualláin, S. 1964. Survey of the Megalithic Tombs of Ireland. Volume 2 County Mayo. Stationery Office. Dublin. Hencken, H. 1939. A Long Cairn at Creevykeel, Co. Sligo. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 69, 53-98. Hinch, J.deW. 1913. The Shelly Drift of Glenulra and Belderrig, Co. Mayo. The Irish Naturalist 22,1-6. Molloy, K. and O’Connell, M. 1995. Palaeological investigations towards the reconstruction of environment and land-use changes during prehistory at Céide Fields, western Ireland. Problemeder Kustenforschung im sudlichen Nordseegebiet 23,187-225. Ó Nualláin, S. 1972. A Neolithic House at Ballyglass near Ballycastle, Co. Mayo. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 102, 49-57. Otway,C. 1841. Sketches in Erris and Tyrawly. Longman, Orme and Co. London. Piggott, S. 1954. The Neolithic cultures of the British Isles. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. Verrill, L. and Tipping, R. 2010. A palynological and geoarchaeological investigation into Bronze Age farming at Belderg Beg, Co. Mayo, Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 1214-1225. Warren, G. 2009. Belderrig: A ‘New’ Later Mesolithic and Neolithic Landscape in Northwest Ireland. pp. 143-152 in N.Finlay, S. McCartan, N. Milner and C.W. Jones (eds), From Bann Flakes to Bushmills; Papers in Honour of Professor Peter Woodman. Oxford. 116 Probed Surveys: Erris, Céide Fields and Belderg More Seamas Caulfield This draft chapter outlines the progress and results of Caulfield’s main survey projects. It requires editing and integrating with illustrations. These will include the use of maps of the Céide complex at different stages, showing the development of the project. Traditional Turf Cutting in North Mayo Hand cutting of turf for fuel varies from one region to the next due to the nature of the bogs being cut and the extent of bog available. In the case of the deep, rapidly growing Midland bogs, the raised bogs may be five or more metres in depth but confined in area. Turf cutting in these bogs involves a team of at least three people with only one person cutting, another throwing up the sods to the bank and another piling the cut sods on a special flat-bed wooden wheelbarrow and wheeling the sods away from the bank to a spreadfield where they are placed flat on the ground to dry. The top metre or more of the bog is a lightly compacted sphagnum which will not dry and condense so that even if relatively dry, easily absorbs massive amounts of water when left exposed. This metre or more of top is discarded by throwing it into the hole left by last year’s cutting. As many as twelve to fifteen ‘spits’ or ‘tops’ of turf are cut below this, very often the flooding of the boghole rather than reaching the base of the bog is what terminates the cutting. The turf becomes more compacted and therefore dries more densely as one goes downwards though the very dense turf at the base lacking in any binding fibre tends to disintegrate if dried in strong sunshine. The sods range from 10 to 12 cm in square cross-section and from 30 to 40 cm in length cut with a ‘sleán’ or turfspade with a wing at right angles to the normal cutting edge which allows the cutting of the regular square sectioned sod with one thrust and lift of the spade. The turfspade comes in both left and right forms for use by left and right cutters. To cut left-handed is to have the left hand as the lifting hand half way down the handle while the right hand provides some thrust and controls the spade. A left-handed turfspade has the wing on the right hand side of the spade so that the sod when thrown to the left of the cutter is thrown away from the wing. A right-handed turfspade has the wing on the left side for the same reason. The bank of turf cut in a deep raised bog may be up to two metres wide and may be no more than ten metres in length. In regions of extensive blanket bog such as North Mayo, bog depth can vary from a metre or less on slopes to over four metres on flat ground. Gradient rather than altitude is the controlling factor and four metres of bog can be found on flat hill tops as well as in valley bottoms. In North Mayo turf cutting is a one-man operation. The top ten to fifteen centimetres of the growing ‘scraw’ is ‘scrawed’ with the traditional general purpose spade along a bank face 80 to 90 cm wide and one hundred metres or more in length. The first ‘top’ seven to nine sods wide is thrown from the turfspade in a ‘corraí’ or continuous heap one and a half to three metres in from the bank edge. The second top is thrown onto the vacant one and a half metre strip between the bank edge and the first corraí. The third and if present a fourth top is cut and thrown into the boghole. Irrespective of the depth of the bog, no more than four tops is ever cut because of the difficulty of spreading it afterwards. In deeper blanket bog where two or more tops remain uncut, after ten to twelve years 117 cutting the bank face will have receded by eight to ten metres and turf cutters will again remove the scraw and have a second cutting and in very deep bog may even have a third cutting. Turf cutting normally takes place in April and May. After about three weeks in the corraí, in which time a skin dries on the exposed sods, the turf is spread by throwing the first corraí further outwards so that all sods are lying flat on the ground in a strip between three and six metres from the bank edge. The second top is then spread flat on the ground in the three metre strip from the bank edge which had been covered by the first and second corraí. The third and fourth tops are spread in the boghole in a similar manner. In reasonably fair weather the turf is sufficiently dry to be ‘reckled’ three weeks after spreading. Reckling involves standing four sods in a pyramid and if the turf is well dried adding perhaps another six to eight sods around the pyramid with intact or broken sods on top. The open centre of the reckle and the fact that the sod is now in minimal contact with the potentially wet ground allows the turf to dry completely when it is then referred to as ‘saved’. The Erris Survey A major change of direction in the research was initiated in 1979. There were no funds available for excavation that year but a chance meeting with Lelia Doolan who was co-ordinator of a development group in Erris at the time led to the offer of a small grant to investigate some aspect of the archaeology of the Erris area. A short four week programme of reconnoitring areas of cutaway bog and turbary (where bogs were still being cut) located pre-bog walls at numerous locations to the west of Belderrig, including a number at the northern end of the Mullet peninsula. In preparing a brief report on the programme for the Doolan committee and the general public the team were acutely aware of how weak the visual record was. Over the years they knew that even professional archaeologists had at times doubted the existence of the walls from the remains to be seen above ground. The difficulty arose because people thought that where the bog has been cut away, that the prehistoric surface remains exposed but as explained above this is not the case. Because the upper ten to fifteen centimetres of growing bog is removed and thrown down onto the surface exposed in the previous year’s cutting, the ground surface and plants visible in the cutaway bog is the modern surface and plants of the uncut bog. The only place where the pre-bog surface is exposed is the less than one metre wide strip immediately adjacent to the bank face where the last season’s turf has been cut. If the bog depth exceeded four tops deep even this strip will merely show the residual uncut turf. The redeposited top sod or “scraw” can easily cover up the exposed walls so that only the top stones are exposed. This is particularly the case where the bog has not been cut to its full depth. In order to show the profile of the walls in the cutaway bogs, a dozen bamboo rods, three feet in length were inserted into the bog as a transect across the line of the wall at 30 cm intervals. The bamboos were all pushed into the soft bog until they hit the hard ‘gravel’, that is the mineral soil beneath. The resultant profile of the tops of the bamboos is a precise profile of the mineral soil and the prehistoric wall unaffected by the overlying scraw and/or any residual uncut bog. The wall profiles could now be captured in photographs and by giving such unequivocal visual verification it was found that the bamboos allowed the walls to be followed even where there was no visual evidence. During this short season in 1979 it was found that the walls could be followed in under the uncut bog by using bamboos of six feet in length though the insertion and in particular the extraction of the bamboos proved to be very arduous. 118 Iron probes of varying lengths had for long been used to locate fallen timbers and to establish the length and bulk of trees and their depth in the bog. Similar probes had been used to a limited extent when surveying the original Behy/Glenulra fields and at Belderg Beg. Noel Dunne who had worked on the Belderg Beg excavations from 1975 and on the Erris survey now combined the use of probes of different lengths with short bamboos to locate walls in deep uncut bog as he concentrated on part of the Erris survey for a Master’s thesis. T-headed probes made from standard building site rod iron of lengths from 1.5 to 4.0 metres were used depending on the depth of the bog and short bamboos were inserted beside the top of the probe before it was extracted from the bog. In this way, the profile of the pre-bog surface and the walls built on that surface even when under four metres of bog could be transferred to the surface in a few minutes. It is this very basic method which has been in use since then. The Céide Fields Survey The Behy/Glenulra plan was first published in 1978 (Caulfield, 1978). By the early 1980s the plan had been republished in a number of papers and books on early agriculture by a number of archaeologists writing on early agriculture. The Neolithic date and the scale of such early fields was often commented on. Yet it was obvious that what had been mapped was only that part of the fields which happened to be exposed by modern turf cutting and that all the long parallel walls on the plan did not terminate but instead disappeared into uncut bog. In September 1983 the writer returned to the Behy/Glenulra area with a group of UCD undergraduates to attempt to extend the long parallels under the bog. In teams of three with iron probes from 1.5 to 4.0 metres in length and short bamboos the teams located the position of the walls from where they entered the uncut bog. Moving forward about five metres along the projected line of the wall from its last identified location and then moving approximately four metres at right angles, a transect was probed across the projected line. The probe was inserted at every 30cm in order to establish the ground level beneath the bog. As the probe crossed the line of the wall the marker bamboos stand higher than those marking ground level. Even though the feel of the probe hitting on stone is more firm than when it hits the mineral soil and the sound of metal on stone can also be heard, only a raised profile with lower ground level on either side delineated by the template of the bamboos indicates with certainty where the wall is. Once the midpoint of the wall is located a bamboo is left in situ and the team move forward a further five metres. In a short four week programme the long parallels were traced as far again under the bog, doubling the originally mapped area of the Behy/Glenulra system. That system comprised a series of xx parallel walls running inland from the cliff and following the axis of Céide hill, a spur which runs northwards from the plateau of Maumakeogh mountain. Over one and a half kilometres inland from the cliffs some of the walls curve to link with the adjacent parallel closing off the strips with a rounded end. The two most easterly parallel walls of the original Behy/Glenulra field system ran to the summit of Céide hill where they rounded off to link the two parallels together. The most easterly wall also forked to the left in a curve which then became a straight line but which was not parallel to the other walls and was over the crest of the Céide ridge looking eastwards into Glenulra valley. The closest comparison for these large fields were the very extensive fields of the Dartmoor reaves but in one element there was a major contrast. Where the Dartmoor parallel reaves appear to run up to a previously constructed terminal reave at right angles to the parallels, the Behy/Glenulra parallels have no such common boundary. 119 The following season the team continued to extend the known walls further eastwards into Glenulra townland. Hitherto the probing had only attempted to extend known walls where they had been identified in cut away bogs. The new wall discovered at the end of the 1983 programme on the summit of Céide hill had a different alignment to the Behy/Glenulra system of parallels. It was decided to attempt a “blind probe” in a continuous transect eastwards from the summit of the ridge down the eastern side of Céide hill which is the western side of Glenulra valley. A continuous probe at 30 cm intervals was carried out and the raised profiles of four new walls were discovered. Once located, the walls were extended to either side of the transect by the normal method. The new walls were long relatively straight walls and were parallel to the wall on the summit. But whereas the walls on the western side of Céide hill were aligned on the direction of the spur of this hill the new walls on the eastern side of the hill were very much out of kilter with the natural axes of the terrain. Parallel field boundaries whether ancient or modern tend to follow one of the natural axes, either running up slope or along the contours but in contrast these new walls ran diagonally across the slope of the hill. Céide hill which is a spur off Maumkeogh runs in a northerly direction. Ballyknock hill which forms the eastern side of Glenulra valley is on a different axis to Céide hill running in a more northeasterly direction. As well as Glenulra townland, a number of other townlands including Muingelly, Doonfeeney Upper, Doonfeeney Lower, Ballyknock and Sralagagh also extend onto the hill. Most of the bog has been cut off Ballyknock hill and walls had been observed at a number of different locations there. Sralagagh townland which lies to the south of Glenulra and west of Ballyknock has very extensive turbary allotments in bog up to four metres in depth and the location of these walls had been published in 1983. In 1987 the probing programme concentrated on this hill. Most of the earlier observations of pre-bog walls now integrated into a pattern of new parallels aligned in this case on the alignment of Ballyknock hill or else enclosing the top of the hill. One long parallel ran westwards from the summit of Ballyknock hill into the deep Sralagagh bog. It could be seen from the plan that the Sralagagh Ballyknock wall was in harmony with the direction of the land and was also parallel to the walls on the western side of the valley on Céide hill. If those fields were indeed part of a parallel system it had clearly originated on the Ballyknock Sralagagh side of the valley. If this interpretation was correct there should be other walls down the east side of Glenulra valley and those walls should be parallel to those already mapped. A series of blind probes from the Sralagagh townland boundary down the eastern side of Glenulra valley did locate a number of walls and as predicted they were parallel to both the Céide hill east and the Sralagagh walls. To the south and southeast of Ballyknock there are extensive tracts of forest but beyond that walls were identified in the townlands of Aghoo, Ballinglen and Ballykinletteragh. One season of probing and mapping in those townlands has identified a less regular system of boundaries. While these walls to the south east of Ballyknock may eventually be integrated into the main Céide Fields complex their closer proximity to the field systems on Suí Finn across the Ballinglen valley and less than a kilometre away suggest that they should be grouped directly with them. By the end of the 1980s a problem of nomenclature had arisen. The Behy/Glenulra field system was an appropriate name when the fields were confined to the two townlands but the extension onto Ballyknock hill meant the fields forming an integrated system had now been extended into a number of other townlands as well. At this time plans were getting under way for the economic exploitation of the research in a major tourism initiative in Co. Mayo. The research work had commenced on 120 Céide hill twenty five years earlier and the proposal was to build a major interpretative centre overlooking the Céide cliffs where Céide hill ends abruptly. The new name ‘Céide Fields’ was coined to describe the entire field system extending over many square kilometres and into numerous townlands. The extension of the original Behy/Glenulra field system in 1983 and 1984 had extended the known parallels to more than double their length. In the area of the original survey where the bog had been cut away, the plan showed long parallel walls which defined long strips of ground divided by offset crosswalls. The proven success of the blind probing in locating totally concealed walls on both sides of Glenulra valley led to a programme of blind probing between the parallels. This programme carried out in 1989 and 1990 concentrated on an intensive probed survey of a 2km x2km square of hillside straddling the Behy/Glenulra hillside. The blind probing located the crosswalls dividing the strips and also some internal features within the fields particularly one field away to the south of the Behy tomb. The intense structuring of this area of Céide Fields compared to the looseness of Ballyknock/Sralagagh is in part at least a reflection of the intensity of research concentrated on this area. Much work still remains to be done on the eastern part of Céide Fields. Céide Fields is made up of two distinct adjoining field systems, the original Behy Glenulra system aligned on Céide hill and the Ballyknock system aligned on Ballyknock hill to the east. Where they clearly meet at the summit of Céide hill, they are buried under more than three metres of bog. There is a hint that the two systems may not simply abut one another. The first wall encountered immediately east of the Ballyknock aligned wall on the summit is not part of the Ballyknock alignment but appears instead to be on the Céide alignment. If it belongs with the Céide field system it is possibly a residual element with the Ballyknock system over riding the southeastern end of the Céide system. Belderrig Valley: The Belderg More Survey Towards the end of the final season of excavation at Belderg Beg in 1982, the lessons learned on the Erris survey were applied to the wall originally notified to the National Museum in 1934. A limited amount of probing of the wall running eastwards into deep bog extended the wall by over 100 metres. Further work remains to be done on commonage and in private land to the north and east of the excavated site. The hill on the eastern side of Belderrig valley has the enclosed fields of the modern farms on the lower slopes on its western and southern side running down to Belderrig river but the summit and eastern and northern side is unenclosed commonage originally bog covered but now with almost all the bog cut away. Degraded stone walls are visible on the top of the hill as well as two megalithic tombs, one a basic single chamber in a small cairn and the other, a Wedge Tomb built on the highest point of the hill. Looking west across the valley from here one is looking at the Belderg Beg settlement while to the east a Court Tomb (Mayo xx) is visible. When the Céide Fields Interpretative Centre was under construction it was intended that the Centre would act as a magnet to attract tourists to the area and that the Centre would interpret a wider North Mayo in order to hold people within the area for longer. In 1991 the archaeological team was divided with half the team working on the survey at Céide Fields and the other half, surveying the largely exposed remains on Cruinnioc hill in Belderg More townland. This research was part funded by the Heritage Council. 121 The Belderg More survey mapped a series of irregular walls on the summit and in the unenclosed commonage to the northeast and north of the modern enclosed farmland. The top of the hill is enclosed within an irregular but mainly contour wall. At the southwest there may be a hint of two or more walls more or less parallel to the enclosure but as these terminate in the modern farmland it is not possible to say if these parallels were extensive or if the parallel contour strips were repeated further down slope towards the river in the valley bottom. To the north the walls have a more rectilinear pattern and in this area Radiocarbon dates for pine trees growing in one case on top of a wall and in another on 30cm of peat beside a pre-bog wall have given the earliest dates (4580+60 BP; 4480+60 BP). One long and relatively straight wall runs downslope towards Belderrig harbour where it runs into the most northerly modern enclosed field. Just to the north of this field the Warren excavation of the Belderg More Mesolithic site has uncovered a further stretch of pre-bog walling. This wall is probably contemporary with if not part of the main complex of walls for which the early dates have been obtained. A kilometre further to the east , prebog walls have been surveyed in an area of turbary. The walls do not display a regular pattern. A Radiocarbon date of 4010+60 for a pine stump growing in peat 50cm above the mineral soil was 55 metres from a junction of two walls which are likely to be contemporary with the fourth millennium BC walls in Belderrig to the west and Céide Fields to the east. 122 Survey on the Glenamoy – Bartnatra Peninsula Noel Dunne This draft chapter reviews Noel Dunne’s survey work at the western end of the NBNM landscapes. Minor work on text and images is required for completion. Further editing and cross referencing with other chapters will be required. We need to finalise new GIS figures for this chapter to replace those used in Dunne’s MA thesis and – all relevant data has been digitised as part of this phase of the project. Figures are not included in this draft. Dunne will obtain new publication quality plates to accompany the final text. Those taken in the 1980s are considered to be in need of updating. Introduction In the Summer of 1979, Prof. Seamas Caulfield switched his attention from excavation work at Belderrig to reconnaissance survey of pre-bog archaeology, focussing on the Northwest corner of Mayo. This survey revealed evidence of pre-bog boundaries on moderately elevated slopes at a number of locations, including the Northeast portion of the Mullet peninsula in the townlands of Knocknalina, Moyrahan, Shanaghy and Tallaght. Individual occurrences were also recorded at Tristia to the Southwest of Carrowmore Lake, Glencullin Upper to the East of Carrowmore Lake and Rosdoagh on the Rossport peninsula. Isolated megaliths in the Northwest, such as Rosduagh, Shanaghy and Tristia (de Valera and O Nuallain, 1964, Ma2, Ma18 and Ma45) were all shown to have pre-bog walls in their vicinity. Further sites were recorded to the North of Carrowmore Lake over a geographical area for convenience titled the Glenamoy – Barnatra peninsula, with pre-bog boundaries located in the townlands of Faulagh, Muingerroon South, Knocknalower, Gortmelia and Gortbrack North. The present author expanded the survey work in this latter area from 1983 to 1985 as part of an MA thesis in Archaeology at UCD, titled Pre-Bog Archaeology, The Glenamoy-Barnatra Peninsula, Co. Mayo. Study Area As stated, the present study area concentrates on the Glenamoy – Barnatra peninsula, covering an area of c. 53kms2, with a maximum E-W distance of c. 10kms and N-S of 8kms. The peninsula is bounded on the North by Broad Haven Bay and on the West and Southwest by Inver Bay and Tra Kirtaun, both inlets of Broad Haven Bay. On the Northeast, Sruwaddacon Bay and the Glenamoy 123 River form the boundary, with Glenamoy village delimiting the maximum East extent of the survey. The region is delimited on the S by the North shore of Carrowmore Lake, a large expanse of water, 6kms long (N-S) and 4kms wide along its North shore, tapering to 1.5kms wide along its S shore. Some prehistoric monuments were known within the peninsula prior to the present survey. A total of 14 megalithic tombs were recorded, 7 of which are listed by de Valera and O’Nuallain (1964). Five others have been published by Aldridge (1961, 1965), while the remaining 2 were discovered in the course of the 1979 reconnaissance fieldwork. Three cists are listed in the National Museum of Ireland topographical files and a stone circle, on the North end of the peninsula, has been published by Westropp (1912, 130-2). Convex-shaped hills form the most striking topographical features over the peninsula. Five such hills exist, namely, Carrowmore hill (200 ft +), Faulagh hill (500 ft +), Pollatomish hill (348 ft), Knocklalower hill (616 ft) with its W shoulder known locally as Gortmelia hill (400 ft +) and Dooncarton hill (875 ft)/. The latter displays numerous shoulders and 3 individual peaks in excess of 800 ft. In general the slopes and summits of these hills possess a cover of blanket bog, the principal exception being portions of the uppermost slopes of Dooncarton hill, especially its North slope, where bedrock outcrops and where slope is sufficiently steep to discourage the development of blanket bog. In contrast, the East end of the peninsula is low-lying with deep blanket bog cover. This area forms the southwest extent of the Glenamoy plain, a large expanse of lowland bounded on the South by Slieve Fyagh, on the East by Benmore and on the North by the uplands of Glinsk, Knockadaff and Benwee Head. Narrow strips of low-lying terrain exist along the North end of the peninsula between Dooncarton hill and the sea and along the North shore of Carrowmore Lake. A wider band of similar terrain is present along the W edge of the peninsula in the townlands of Graghil, Inver and Gortmelia. The drainage pattern of the peninsula is radial, mostly composed of short youthful stretches of stream. The major river, the Glenamoy, is located at the East edge and drains the plain of the same name, flowing westwards into Sruwaddacon Bay. The Owenduff River drains the South slopes of Knocknalower hill, flowing westwards through the Gortbrack valley floor into Inver Bay. The 124 Bungurra River drains the Knocknalower valley floor in a Northwest direction and then turns South to drain the lowlands East of Faulagh hill, before flowing into the Northeast corner of Carrowmore Lake. Present day settlement and farmland totals 1650ha, or 31% of the area, while blanket bog covers 3,635 ha (69%). The major block of present day settlement is on the lowland along the West coast, the West slope of Gortmelia hill, the Owenduff valley floor and the lower Southwest slope of Dooncarton hill. A continuous narrow band of settlement stretches along the North and Northeast coast from Dooncarton townland, through Barnaguillew, Carnhill and Pollatomish, to Aghoos. Elsewhere, the present day settlements are in the form of small, fairly fertile oasis within the bogland. These islands include the land adjacent to the Glenamoy River, close to Bellanaboy bridge, the lower South slope of Faulagh hill, the East slope of Knocknalower hill and a band of land that stretches from the Northwest corner of Carrwomore Lake to Barnatra. Turbary, or the practice of turf cutting, is generally practised in close proximity to the present settlements. This is most evident in the case of the West and Southwest slopes of Dooncarton hill and most of Gortmelia hill, which are close to the quite densely settled villages of Dooncarton, Graghil, Gortbrack, Inver and Gortmelia. These villages were even more densely settled in prefamine times. Elsewhere, turbary is normally practised on South and West hillslopes, to facilitate the drying of the turf and on bogland that is in close proximity to roads. Completely cut-away tracts of bogland are present on the two previously mentioned hillslopes, on the slopes of Carrowmore hill, on the Southwest slope of Faulagh hill and on the South slope of Knocknalower hill. The major continuous tract of uncut bog covers the lowland in the East of the study area, the summit and North and East slopes of Faulagh hill, the Southeast spur of Faulagh hill and the lowland between Faulagh and Pollatomish hills. An exception here is the turbary practised on the low-lying bog in Aghoos townland. Part of the surface of the low-lying, eastern bog is now planted with coniferous forest. The other areas of uncut bog cover the summit and North slope of Knocknalower hill, large areas of the summit and South to Southeast slopes of Dooncarton hill, the upper slopes of Pollatomish hill and the low-lying area between Gortmelia and Carrowmore hills. Evidence of prehistoric forest cover in the area is gained from the extensive remains of tree stumps, trunks and branches, predominantly of pine and birch, but with some oak, preserved in their levels of growth either in lower layers of the bog or under it. A band of bog containing such remains covers 125 the lowland South of Faulagh hill, all of Carrowmore hill, the lowland between Carrowmore and Gortmelia hills and the lowland close to the coast in Gortmelia, Inver and Graghil townlands. Where bog sections are present, there is evidence of tree stumps in the low-lying bog in the East part of the study area. Large numbers are present in the cut-away bog in the lowland between Faulagh and Pollatomish hills and close to the coast in Aghoos townland. In 1984, large oak trunks were removed from the bog in the course of land drainage close to the Northeast corner of Carrowmore Lake. Tree stumps are visible below the water level along the East edge of the lake. They are also evident uphill of the uppermost limit of prehistoric settlement on the South slopes of Dooncarton and Faulagh hills. The extensive remains of scrubby pine in the lower levels of the bog in Aghoos townland were studied by Prof. Martin Downes. One pine stump gave a C-14 determination of 2,348 bc (pers com). One kilometre W of Bellanaboy bridge, a pine stump with its roots in the bog, 20cms above the mineral soil, yielded a determination of 2390 + 65 bc. A second pine stump from the same spot, but from a lower level and with its roots in the mineral soil, give a determination of 5160 + 75 bc (Hakansson, 1974, 323). While the latter tree did not grow in the bog, its preservation would suggest that anaerobic conditions existed by 5,000 bc, thus preserving it from decay. Megalithic tombs, cists and stone circles Of the 14 megalithic tombs now known within the study area, 6 are classified as court tombs, 2 as portal tombs and 1 as a wedge tomb, while 5 remain as unclassified. Seven of these tombs are included by de Valera and O Nuallain (1964, Ma 1, Ma19, Ma20, Ma21, Ma22, Ma23 and Ma38). Three others, M1, M2 and M3, were known at the time their survey was undertaken, but were not included for reasons that will be discussed later. These 3 megaliths, along with 2 others, M6 and M7, were subsequently published by Aldridge (1961, 1965), while the remaining 2 tombs, M4 and M5, were located in the course of preliminary reconnaissance work in the area in 1979. Although the number of tombs has been doubled for the area, the new tombs, rather than altering the distribution pattern in any way, tend to intensify that pattern already established. However, such an increase in tomb numbers would have a profound effect on locational analysis type settlement studies, which use megaliths as basic raw data to indicate settlement pattern. 126 The elevation of the tombs, all sited between 100 and 500 ft OD is consistent with that noted for Co. Mayo generally. Six of the tombs are located between 100 and 200 ft OD, with 4 of the 6 court tombs falling within this bracket. Three of the tombs are located between 200 and 300 ft OD, 3 others between 300 and 400 ft OD, and 2 between 400 and 500 ft OD. Such elevations are related to siting on moderately elevated hillslopes with a tendency to avoid lowlands, such as the eastern lowlands, the valley floors and the coastal strips. Where the megaliths are located in general low-lying areas, they still tend to be sited in elevated positions. The 2 megaliths, M5 and Ma19, in the Owenduff valley are sited on sloping ground above the valley floor proper. Dooncarton tomb, Ma1, is sited on the shoulder of a terrace, immediately overlooking the lowland along the North coastal strip. The Knocknalower tomb, M4, is the only megalith within the area that has a true valley floor siting. In general, the tombs favour slopes with a South or West aspect. Seven are sited on Southsouthwest facing slopes, with 5 of these being located on Faulagh hill. The major exceptions here, and indeed the major exceptions to the whole prehistoric settlement pattern noted over the area, are the 3 tombs located on North hillslopes. One is located on Faulagh hill, Ma21, one on Knocknalower hill, Ma20 and one on Dooncarton hill, Ma1. The Knocknalower tomb is sited on a Westnorthwest facing basal slope of a natural amphitheatre set into the North side of that hill. This natural feature is probably a corrie dating to the Munsterain Glaciation. It may be no coincidence that the court tomb sited on the North slope of Dooncarton hill and a second court tomb in Rosdoagh (de Valera and O Nuallain, 1964, Ma2) on the adjacent peninsula are located either side of Sruwaddacon Bay, a stretch of water that holds a very rich salmon run. Nine of the megaliths are located in bogland, with the remaining 5 on present day agricultural land. The latter 5 megaliths are extremely important to the study, representing the principal means by which the prehistoric settlement pattern can be extended into such areas. 127 The principal surviving components common to 4 of the 5 unclassified tombs, M1, M3, M4 and M7, consist of an orthostat with a displaced capstone resting at its side. At 3 of these sites other stones are evident, some of which may be orthostatic, but these are now in a very destroyed and collapsed state. Two of these sites, M1 and M3, were known at the time that the Megalithic Survey of Ireland, Vol 2 (de Valera and O Nuallain, 1964), was been compiled, but they were not included. That survey represented a minimum definite rather than a maximum probable listing of megalithic tombs and the 2 sites were not regarded as falling within the former category. However, having conducted the present survey, these sites can be definitely regarded as being megalithic tombs, even in their present state of collapse. This judgement is substantiated by the 2 probed transects that were undertaken across site M3. The transects show the presence, under the present bog surface, of a substantial subcircular cairn surrounding the above ground megalithic remains. The cairn is at least 10m, and may be as much as 18.5m, in diameter and has a surviving height of up to 1m. Such probed transects could be expanded in order to perform complete sub-surface contour plans of sites such as megalithic tombs still covered by bog. A maximum number of 8 cists, none of which are now visible, are known for the study area. Four of these date to the prehistoric period, 3 are problematic and one is likely to be more recent. The latter, site C5, was discovered in 1961 in Dooncarton or Glengad townland and consisted of an unaccompanied inhumation in a long stone cist that was orientated E-W. The orientation and the fact that the inhumation survived under a very acid bog cover, suggests that the site is not prehistoric. A very strong local tradition of a long stone cist, which contained an inhumation, exists for site C6. It was located on level ground very close to the coast in Inver townland and was discovered in the mineral soil, which had subsequently been covered by sand deposits. However, local reports regarding the date of discovery and the form of interment are extremely conflicting. 128 In 1936, 2 sub-rectangular cists, C1 and C2, were uncovered during the removal of a gravel mound on Gortmelia hill. The deposits of one of the cists contained cremated bone and “burnt clay”. Subsequently, the present landowner has uncovered 3 cists. However, since the original cists were not removed in 1936, it is not clear whether these 3 sites include either of both of the original discoveries. It means that at least 3, and possibly 5 cists, were uncovered altogether. The relationship of the sites to the mound is not clear. In 1928, a cist of small dimensions, site C4, was discovered in Knocknalower townland and yielded cremated bone in an upright urn. Sites C1, C2 (Waddell, 1970, 125) C3 and C4 can be regarded as burials dating to the Bronze Age, to which may possibly be added sites C7 and C8. The Gortmelia group are sited at the top of a Southwest facing slope at an altitude of 200 to 300 ft OD, in an area of present day farmland, Site C4 is also on present day farmland at an altitude of 300 to 400 ft OD, on an ESE facing slope. Two stone circles and an arc setting of stones are present within the study area. The latter, site SC 3 in Knocknalower townland, is included within the stone circle category as it may originally have been one. A roadway immediately to the North may have partially destroyed the site. Six stones are now evident, ranging in height from 60cms to 1m. Site SC 1 in Gortbrack North townland consists of a ring of 9 low, set stones, ranging from 4cms to 55cms above present ground level. The site is sub-circular in plan and measures 3.6m by 4.2m. Nine orthostats are also evident at site SC 2 in Dooncarton or Glengad townland and these range in height from 50cms to 1.2m. The tallest stone, located in the East of the circle, is pillar-shaped, unlike the other slab-shaped stones of the circle. The site has a diameter of 5.2m. Westropp (1912, 130132) shows 11 orthostats and 4 prostrate stones on his plan of the site. The circle could originally 129 have had up to 15 orthostats, as Otway (1841, 236) records that some of the stones from the site had been overthrown. SC 3is sited on a S facing slope, at an altitude of 300 to 400 ft OD. SC 1 is sited at an altitude of 200 to 300 ft OD on a SSW facing slope. SC 2 is located close to the court tomb, M14, and is on a Northnorthwest facing slope at an altitude of 100 to 200 ft OD. The extension of the prehistoric settlement into areas of present day farmland already indicated by 5 of the megalithic tombs, is further supported by the latter site, along with cists C1, C2 C3 and C4. An earthen mound, located in the Owenduff valley floor at an altitude of 50 to 100 ft OD is of uncertain origin, but is almost definitely man-made and may be a pre-bog barrow or tumulus. The feature is sub-circular in plan, measuring 21m by 17.5m and has a height of 3m. Bog depths in the vicinity of the site vary from 60cms to 1.25m, tapering to 10cms at the top of the mound. Prehistoric boundaries A total of 9.5kms of prehistoric field boundary was located and surveyed in the course of the fieldwork. The various areas were these boundaries occur and the length sub-total for each area is listed in Table 1. The boundaries are exclusively confined to areas of bogland. Two stretches which occur on present-day agricultural land, one on the Northwest slope of Dooncarton hill and the other on the Southwest slope of the same hill, are within areas of true Gweesalia-type blanket bog. The upper surface of the bog in such areas has been modified by man to support grass growth. Boundary features can, however, be traced by probing in this type of bogland, though this exercise proves quite strenuous. Hill Location on Hill Length of Boundary Faulagh South and West slopes 1.35 km Knocknalower South slope 0.6 km Gortmelia Hilltop and Southwest slope 2.3 km Dooncarton Southeast shoulder 0.4 km 130 Dooncarton Southwest slope 3.15 km Dooncarton Northwest slope 1.3 km Dooncarton North slope 0.4 km Table 1: Total length of pre-bog boundary recovered per area The term field boundary, rather than field wall or fence, is deliberately used here as a variety of boundary types, mainly constructed with earth and stone, are evident across the study area. This is in sharp contrast to the almost exclusive evidence of collapsed dry-stone walls noted at Belderg Beg and Behy-Glenulra (Caulfield, 1978, 1983). In fact, this boundary type does not even form the norm within the study area. The variety of boundary types can be seen in the profiles illustrated in Figs X-X. These profiles were constructed by recording pre-bog and bog surface levels, normally every 20cms across a transect. The pre-bog levels were then joined together using straight lines. Jagged, saw-tooth profiles reflect the presence of stone in the feature, while the smoother forms reflect earthen remains. Collapsed dry-stone walls are evident on the summit and Southwest slope of Gortmelia hill. The uppermost boundary on Knocknalower hill is also of similar construction. A second type of stone wall consists of widely spaced orthostats, arranged in lines with no surviving evidence of intermediate bank or wall material. Such features are evident along part of the uppermost boundary on the Northwest slope of Dooncarton hill and on the South slope of Faulagh hill, immediately East of megalith tomb M1. This form of boundary, if it exists under uncut bog within the study area, would be almost impossible to locate and follow by probing. Earthen banks and ditches with evidence of stone capping or collapsed stone walls on top of the bank are the most common type of boundary within the area. These forms are especially evident on 131 the North, Northwest and Southwest slopes of Dooncarton hill and along parts of the boundaries on the S slope of Faulagh hill. Simple bank and ditch boundaries are evident on the Southeast shoulder of Dooncarton hill, on the S slope of Knocknalower hill and the Southwest slope of Faulagh hill. The East side of the enclosure on the Southwest slope of Faulagh hill consists of a bank with a ditch to either side. Slight secondary banks on the opposite side of the ditch to the main bank are evident in some instances. The earthen banks and ditches proved to be the most difficult form of boundary to locate in the early stages of fieldwork. Two reasons account for this. Firstly, the initial reconnaissance was psychologically tuned towards the search for boundaries of stone, as this was the predominant form noted in the general north Mayo region up to that point. Secondly, dry-stone walls and earthen banks capped with stone can be readily visible in cut-away bogland, even from afar, as the stones will generally protrude in places through the redeposited top scraw. Also, the bright colour of the stones from having been bleached by the acid bog can provide a sharp contrast to that of the bog surface. Earthen banks, however, will have slipped somewhat and the ditches silted since their formation and such features are very easily masked by bog and vegetation cover. During the second season of surveying a number of factors combined to make the ditches much easier to recognise. Wetter conditions can prevail over the ditch areas, coupled with the associated vegetation cover and the occasional reflection of the feature in the bog surface. Once located, such earthen features can be extended with comparative ease and the probability of recovery is probably just as good as that of their stone counterparts. Each individual boundary within the study area is not necessarily constructed in similar fashion, or with similar materials, along all of its length. For example, the upper boundary noted on the Northwest slope of Dooncarton hill comprises, along part of its length, an earthen bank capped with stone, with a ditch on the uphill side, while along other stretches it is formed with widely spaced orthostatic stones. The long boundary on the S slope of Faulagh hill is generally in the form of an earthen bank with a ditch on the uphill side, but in places the bank can be capped with a now collapsed dry-stone wall. 132 The cross-section area occupied by boundary features in Figs X-X ranges from 0.3m2 to 2m2 and averages 0.8m2. Thus, every one kilometre of boundary contains, on average, 800m3 of material. Likewise, every 9.5kms (the total length of boundary recovered within the area) contains 7,600m3. The boundaries are almost completely confined to slopes with a West or South aspect, the one exception being the isolated boundary on the North slope of Dooncarton hill. Their elevation band between 100 and 600 ft OD is quite similar to that previously noted for the siting of the megalithic tombs. When viewed in the context of land allocation, the principal form of boundary that is evident from the survey, is one that delimits the upper extent of settlement. These are generally the longest stretches of boundary discovered and tend to follow, for part of their distances at least, the line of the contours. However, as will be seen later, it would be quite inappropriate to refer to such features as “contour” boundaries or “contour” fences. On the North slope of Dooncarton hill, a short stretch of this boundary type is evident just below the 600 ft contour. On the Northwest and Southwest slopes of the same hill, the line of a similar feature is almost identical to that of the 500 ft contour. Approximately midway along this boundary, an interesting occurrence was noted. A modern field fence, representing the present day upper limit of agricultural land, is constructed directly on top of the prehistoric boundary and follows its line for some distance. On the Southeast shoulder of Dooncarton hill the upper boundary is at a height of c. 570 ft OD, while on Faulagh hill it is located quite close to the 400 ft contour. At the Behy-Glenulra site, the upper limit of settlement is located at a considerably higher altitude (Caulfield, 1985). On this hillside, the field walls extend to a height of c. 760 ft OD. The direction that these upper boundaries can take is most evident on the Northwest and Southwest slopes of Dooncarton hill. Here the boundary extends for a distance of c. 0.65km along the 500 ft contour. It then turns abruptly on both slopes to extend downhill and form part of the prehistoric field system located further downslope. The total length of this boundary recovered in the course of the survey is 1.35 km. It now represents the only unifying factor between the two prehistoric field systems which are separated by a finger of modern settlement. 133 Where the boundary turns abruptly on both slopes, further boundaries are tagged on in curving fashion and continue the upper limit of settlement along the 500 ft contour. The boundary which is tagged on at the Northwest slope then turns downhill after only a distance of 170m. The principal upper boundary and its downhill turns, delimits a wedge-shaped portion of the hillside. This area is sub-divided by two further boundaries which join the main one at right-angles and extend downhill. Another wedge-shaped delimitation is suggested by the turning angle of the additional upper boundary on the Northwest slope. The fact that the upper limit of settlement does not consist of one continuous boundary feature might suggest that the settlement of this hillside was not undertaken in one overall operation. Instead, initial settlement may have been delimited by one of the wedges, to which further accretions were added with time. The turning of the upper boundary feature abruptly downhill is also noted on the North slope of Dooncarton hill. On the Southeast shoulder of Dooncarton hill, two short stretches of boundary are separated by a gap of 500m. The area of this gap consists of uncut bog and time constraints did not allow the features to be traced into that area. However, they are likely to form one feature representing the upper limit of settlement in that area. Two short walls are right-angles to the North stretch and 150m apart are the only indications of land division on the downhill side. On Faulagh hill, the principal boundary is in the form of a gentle arc that extends generally along the contour and reaches a maximum elevation of 400 ft OD. To the East, a second boundary runs along the 400 ft contour and, while a junction was not established, it is likely to tag onto the principal boundary in similar fashion as noted on Dooncarton hill. Uphill of the West end of the principal boundary, a short stretch of wall is again sited on the 400 ft contour. This feature may have a continuation in another short stretch of wall located on the West slope of the hill. While much further work is required, it appears that at least 3 different boundaries combine to delimit the upper extent of settlement along the 400 ft contour. This is very similar to the situation on Dooncarton hill, though at a lower altitude. The manner in which these boundaries extend downhill, either in gentle or abrupt fashion, shows that it is inappropriate it is to refer to them as “contour boundaries”. 134 No upper boundary was located on Knocknalower hill, while on Gortmelia hill the field boundaries extend over the hilltop, which is just in excess of 400 ft OD. Immediately South of the principal upper boundary on the Southwest slope of Dooncarton hill, a long boundary extends for 500m in an East-West direction. Three other boundaries extend at rightangles from this feature, while 2 others are aligned parallel to it. Together they create a quite regular pattern of land division on the hillslope, consisting of one vertical band, of width 150m to 200m and 2 horizontal bands, 50m and 100m wide. Within the vertical band, 2 boundaries forming a Y-shaped plan, are aligned, not on the regular system, but on the upper boundary feature. The regular plan appears to have been superimposed on an earlier system related to the principal upper boundary. Probing showed that gaps exist between the boundaries of both systems. The likely explanation is that stones, where they occurred on close proximity, were robbed from the principal upper boundary system during the construction of the later, more regular plan. Two long intersecting walls on Gortmelia hilltop may indicate regular, large-scale land division in this area but much more reconnaissance work needs to be undertaken before a pattern can be established. On Knocknalower hill, 2 parallel boundaries, 125m apart, extend along the contours. 125m further uphill, another boundary is evident, but is on a slightly different alignment. Also present on this hillslope are 3 short parallel boundaries that form 2 bands, each 70m side, running oblique to the contours. Though no clear pattern of individual fields were located within the overall study area, the upper boundary features, the widely spaced parallels on Dooncarton and Knocknalower hills and the long 135 stretches of walling on Gortmelia hilltop, all indicate large-scale land divisions, possibly for the purposes of pasture farming. However, small enclosures also occur. On the Southwest slope of Gortmelia hill, an oval enclosure measures 120m by 85m and covers an area of 0.7ha. Tagged onto its uphill side is a semi-oval enclosure of length 50m and area 0.2ha. These enclosures are located 160m Northeast of a house site, H1. Their location close to the house and their size may indicate that they were used for the purposes of tillage. The sub-square enclosure on the Southwest slope of Faulagh hill measures 85m by 60m (0.5ha) and may also have been used for tillage. Direct evidence of arable farming appears to be present in the vicinity of 2 round houses on the Southwest slope of Dooncarton hill. A negative lynchet located to the East of house site H1, is accompanied by a positive lynchet to the S of house site H2. Two small clearance cairns are incorporated into the East end of the positive lynchet. What resembles a short stretch of low stone wall, immediately to the S of the negative lynchet, may in fact be the remains of a headland. The area enclosed by the lynchets measures 50m by 50m (0.25ha). Three house sites, all of which are round, were located within the study area. All are sited on Southwest facing slopes. The 2 house sites previously mentioned on Dooncarton hill, H1 and H2, are located within 10m of each other, on an area of ground terraced into the hillslope. They are sited at an elevation of 300-400 ft OD, while the third house, H3 on Gortmelia hill, is at 100 to 200 ft OD. House site H1 is almost completely exposed. It consists of a low ring of stones, with evidence in places of inner and outer facing stones. The facing stones indicate an original wall width of c. 85cms and the internal diameter of the feature is c 5.7m. The second adjacent house, H2, is completely covered by c. 50cms of bog, with the structure reflected in the present bog surface. The profiles indicate a collapsed ring of stones, with diameters of 7.5m internally and 12.5m externally. 136 The third house site, H3, on Gortmelia hill, is partially exposed but is mostly covered by bog varying in depth from 10 to 85cms. The probed profile also indicates a collapsed ring of stones, with diameters of 8.6m internally and 15m externally. Prehistoric settlements Dooncarton hill The area of bogland, where the isolated boundary on the North slope of Dooncarton hill is located, is confined on its West side by present-day agricultural land. It is also confined by agricultural land on the lower slopes to the East, while the higher slopes of the hillside in that area appear too steep to allow settlement to occur. The presence of the court tomb, M14 and the stone circle, SC 2, may indicate that the field boundaries originally extended at least that far along the North slope of the hill. The inference that the tomb and the stone circle may be reasonably used as indicators of the original presence of field boundaries will be discussed later. A local inhabitant, Mr James Cuff, stated that prehistoric boundaries were also present on the agricultural land on the West side, but were removed within living memory for building purposes. The lowlying bog along the Northwest coast in Graghil townland mostly comprises cut-away bogland that displays no evidence of prehistoric boundaries. It is unlikely therefore that the field systems, in this area at least, extended to the coastline, or even extended below the 100 ft contour. The system on the Northwest slope is mostly separated from that on the Southwest slope by modern settlement. However as previously noted, the principal upper boundary represents a unifying factor. The presence of a 280m stretch of field boundary and an unclassified megalith on an island of cut-away bogland in the middle of the modern settlement also demonstrate that the prehistoric field system originally extended into that area. Agricultural land divides the settlement complex on the Southwest slope from the 2 stretches of upper boundary feature noted on the Southeast shoulder of the hill. The more northerly of these 2 stretches curves around an elbow of the hillside at an altitude of 570 ft OD, its direction indicating 137 that it may originally have linked with the system on the Southwest slope. The gap in the distribution here is c. 680m. Two court tombs, M5 and M6, and one portal tomb, Ma19, demonstrate prehistoric activity within the area of modern settlement along the S slope of the hill at an altitude of 100 to 300 ft OD. The gaps in the distribution of prehistoric field boundaries on Dooncarton hill appear to be purely a function of the modern settlement pattern. If this is the case, and the megalithic tombs are reflecting areas where field boundaries once existed, then the extent of prehistoric settlement on the hillside may be postulated. This area is in the form of a band, 5kms long, located between 100 and 600 ft OD, which stretches from the court tomb, site Ma1, along the North, West and S slopes of the hill to the Southeast shoulder. Faulagh, Knocknalower and Gortmelia hills The short stretch of boundary, between 300 and 400 ft OD, on the West slope of Faulagh hill is probably an extension of the upper boundary feature further to the E. However, uncut bog lies between and an extensive probing operation needs to be undertaken to confirm whether or not this is the case. If this proved positive, then the complex on the South slope of Faulagh hill would be separated by a gap of only 400m from the pre-bog boundaries on the South slope of Knocknalower hill. Two long intersecting field walls are evident on the top of Gortmelia hill, along with numerous shorter stretches and a settlement complex on the Southwest slope. However, the overall pre-bog field system in this area is likely to be much more extensive. More recently, field walls were noted extending over the hilltop in the direction of Knocknalower hill. These latter boundaries reduce the gap between the field systems on Gortmelia hill and those on the S slope of Knocknalower hill to a distance of c. 650m. Almost completely cut-away bogland is present on the lower Southwest slope of Gortmelia hill. As was already noted in the case of Graghil townland, there is again no evidence of the field boundaries extending to the coast or even below the 100 ft contour. 138 The 2 court tombs, Ma38 and Ma23, lie in an area of uncut bog on the Southeast slope of Faulagh hill. This is the only region within the study area where extensive field systems may be present, but have not been recorded due to the unbroken nature of the bog surface. In contrast to the observations made regarding Dooncarton hill, the gaps in the distribution of the prehistoric field systems on Faulagh, Knocknalower and Gortmelia hills are probably due to the limitations imposed on the survey by time and manpower constraints and the presence of tracts of uncut blanket bog. The total extent of prehistoric field boundaries may also be postulated for the aforementioned hills. This is also in the form of a band, 6kms long and located between the 100 and 570 ft OD, that stretches from the court tombs, Ma38 and Ma23, along the S slopes of Faulagh and Knocknalower hills, over Gortmelia hilltop to the Southwest slope of that hill. Overall prehistoric settlement areas and voids The latter area is separated from the previous settlement zone postulated for Dooncarton hill by the North slope of Knocknalower hill and the saddle between it and Dooncarton hill. Bog cuttings bottoming to the mineral soil are present within this area and show no evidence of field boundaries, therefore, the gap is likely to be genuine. However, if megalithic tombs are regarded as an indicator of the original presence of field systems, then the siting of the portal tomb, Ma20, within this postulated void poses a problem. The possibility that this megalith was located outside the general settlement area may be enhanced by evidence gleaned from 2 of the unclassified tombs, sites M3 and Ma21. If the main boundary features noted on the S slope of Faulagh hill represent the true upper limit of settlement, and this seems likely both from their length and from comparison with the upper boundaries noted on Dooncarton hill, then M3 was located uphill of the settlement. Ma21, sited on the North slope of the same hill is in an area of uncut bog. However, as numerous stream erosion gullies section both the 139 bog and the underlying mineral soil on this hillslope, pre-bog field boundaries, if present, should have been located over the course of the fieldwork. Only 2 hills within the study area, Carrowmore hill (200 ft OD +) and Pollatomish hill (300 ft OD +) show no evidence of prehistoric settlement. Their altitudes fall within the elevation band for settlement noted on all of the other hillsides. Modern settlement covers the S slopes of Carrowmore hill up to the 200 ft contour. The rest of the hill comprises mostly cut-away bogland. Field boundaries, if originally present would be expected to extend over the hilltop, as was noted on Gortmelia hill. Extensive excavation during the construction of a modern waterworks on the summit of the hill failed to turn up any evidence of prehistoric activity. Where bog still survives on the hilltop and slopes, pine trees can be seen in their position of growth in its bottom layers. Scrubby pine and birch with their roots firmly in the mineral soil are also evident. Partially cut-away bogland covers Pollatomish hill and if field boundaries were originally present here, they should have been located in the course of the fieldwork. It has already been noted that field boundaries are possibly present on the Southeast slope of Faulagh hill in the vicinity of the court tombs, Ma38 and Ma23, but that the absence of turbary in this area hindered their recovery. The other hill slopes where field systems could conceivably be present are the entire North slope of Faulagh hill and the North slope of Knocknalower hill between 400 and 600 ft contours, also due to the absence of turbary. The correlation of turbary with the West and S slopes, as rapid drying of turf is more favourable on such slopes, may be exerting a certain influence on the noted distribution of prehistoric settlement. The principal absence of settlement over the study area, however, is in the case of the lowlying regions. These include the valley floors, the West and Northwest coastal strips, the North shore of Carrowmore Lake and the Glenamoy plain in the E, with its extension into the area between Faulagh and Pollatomish hills. Sufficient factors are present over these areas, including turbary, stream erosion gullies, quarries and modern drainage, to permit the location of pre-bog archaeological features, in at least some instances, if they are present. Since no archaeological evidence was recorded, the absence is very likely to be genuine. 140 This void is substantiated by examining outside the region to the East (Caulfield, 1983, 197). No prehistoric monuments are known between the East slope of Faulagh hill and Belderg, 17kms to the E. This is an extensive area of lowland known as the Glenamoy plain, of which the eastern part of the present study area forms a western extension. A pine stump with its roots in mineral soil underlying blanket bog, 1km West of Bellanaboy bridge yielded a C-14 determination of 5160 + 75 bc (Hakansson, 1974, 323). It is therefore likely that the growth of Low Level Atlantic type bog in the Glenamoy area had been initiated shortly after this date, thus preserving the tree from decay. The start of bog growth in the low-lying areas close to the prehistoric settlement within the study area is likely to be of similar date. The trees in the mineral soil on Carrowmore hill may suggest that this is the case. The unfavourable conditions which existed in these areas prior to the Neolithic colonization of the region probably explain the absence of settlement. A further explanation for the void in the Glenamoy region may be the precipitous nature of the coastline, broken only at Portacloy and Porturlin, which does not allow ready access to the sea on a daily basis. On Faulagh and Dooncarton hills, such pine trees in the lower levels of the blanket bog are present on the uphill side of the upper boundaries, but do not occur on the downhill side. Fig X shows that, over the study area as a whole, the distributions of these trees and the areas of prehistoric settlement are mutually exclusive. This suggests that the two may be contemporary and that Neolithic farming practices kerbed the encroachment of the bog and the subsequent trees onto the settled areas. An alternative explanation is that the trees may have been removed in the course of subsequent settlement of the areas. 141 Bibliography Aldridge, R. B. (1961). “Some Megalithic and Other Sites in Counties Mayo and Sligo”. J.G.A.S., Vol. 29, 83-90. Aldridge, R. B. (1965). “Megalithic and Other Sites in Counties Mayo and Galway”. J.G.A.S., Vol. 31, 11-15. Caulfield, S. (1978). “Neolithic Fields: the Irish Evidence”, in Bowen, H. C. and Fowler, P. J. (Eds.), Early Land Allotment, B.A.R. 48, Oxford. pp.137-143 Caulfield, S. (1983). “The Neolithic Settlement of North Connaught”, in Reeves-Smyth, T. and Hammond, F., Landscape Archaeology in Ireland, B.A.R. 116, Oxford. pp. 195-216 Caulfield, S. (1985). “Discovering a 100 Acre Five Thousand Year Old Farm”, U.C.D. News. de Valera, R. and Ó Nualláin, S. (1964). Survey of the Megalithic Tombs of Ireland, Volume 2, County Mayo, Dublin. Hakansson, S. (1974). “University of Lund radiocarbon dates VII”, Radiocarbon, Vol. 16, 307-330. Otway, C. (1841). Sketches in Erris and Tyrawly, Dublin. Waddell, J. (1970). “Irish Bronze Age Cists, A Survey”, J.R.S.A.I., Vol. 100, 91-139. Westropp, T. J. (1912). “Promontory Forts and Early Remains in Co. Mayo”, J.R.S.A.I., Vol. 62, 130132. 142 Survey from Ballinglen to Rathfran Bay Gretta Byrne This draft chapter reviews the results of Byrne’s survey work at the east of the study area. The text is complete, bar minor edits. New GIS based figures have been generated and require minor modifications to labels etc to finalise in terms of cross references with the text. The new figures are included here, but will be modified for the final texts. Research Outline and Methodology The survey was originally undertaken as a requirement for an MA degree (Byrne, 1986). The area surveyed was the eastern section of the North Mayo blanket bog extending from the Ballinglen River which flows into Bunatrahir Bay in the west to Rathfran Bay, the estuary of the Cloonaghmore, sometimes known as the Palmerstown River, in the east. The area was already known to have a great concentration of megalithic, mostly court, tombs described as “remarkable” by de Valera as early as 1951 (de Valera 1951, 193). In the intervening years further megaliths had been recorded, including the Rathlackan court tomb Ma116, by Aldridge who briefly referred to “buried walling and remains of hut circles” in the area (Aldridge 1965, 12). During the course of the survey a total linear length of 22kms of pre-bog walls, 20 house sites and two further court tombs were located and mapped. The methodology involved a preliminary walking of all areas of peat to determine the depth of peat, extent of turf cutting and any visible remains of pre-bog features. Frequently the peat was sufficiently cut away to expose visible lengths of walling, or sometimes an occasional stone might be visible jutting above the cutover surface. This happened over large parts of the Rathlackan, Barnhill and Castletown areas and on portions of Carrowmore hill. Other parts of the higher ground on Carrowmore and on large areas of the broad ridge on top of Seefin the peat was still 2m or more deep. Sometimes walls would be visible in drains or roadsides and occasionally stones visible in modern field banks constructed of turf would be an indication of a wall beneath. Following the initial walkover a detailed systematic survey was conducted using the probing technique pioneered by Caulfield at Céide Fields. This was used to verify walls where only occasional stones were visible and also to locate features under the deeper peat. There were however some limitations to the technique. If the wall was very collapsed and spread out or if the wall had been robbed it was very difficult to identify in a probed profile. In some cases exposed walls were robbed of loose portable stones by the turf cutters to provide foundations for bog roads leaving only the larger or set stones in place. One example of this was Ballymachugh H2 (Figure 9) where according to a local turf cutter a lot of stones forming a wall “about 1 foot (0.3m) high” were removed in the 1950s leaving only the basal set stones. Some areas of cutaway peat had occasional stones protruding which may be remains of destroyed walls but probing could not with confidence discern definite walls so were not included. This occurred in Lackanhill about 400m N of the Lecarrowntemple court tombs Ma16 and Ma17; in 143 Creevagh about 600m NW of H3 and close to Carrowmacshane wedge tomb Ma126 (Figure 2) and also in the vicinity of Aghaleague court tomb Ma26 (Figure 5). In some areas of old turf banks up to 2m high on the East side of Seefin the peat is very dry leaving it extremely difficult to probe. Because of this some walls have not been completely followed by probing. There may also be more walls completely concealed under deep uncut peat on the top of Seefin which have not been located. On Carrowmore hill a large area to the South and Southwest of Knockboha round cairn was planted with spruce forestry in the 1960s. One wall was followed for 60m under the trees but it was not possible to locate further walls due to the thick carpet of spruce needles and the dense shallow horizontal roots made probing impossible. Subsequent to the original survey further areas on the South end of Carrowmore; to the North and West of Rathlackan excavated site and on Barnhill have been forested. Field Walls Pre-bog field walls have been located in five separate locations (Figure 1). The Castletown system is located in a flat low lying area on the coast between Bunatrahir Bay and Downpatrick Head while an isolated stretch of walling was found in a similar location at the east side of the Downpatrick headland. Neither of these have any associated megalithic tombs. The elongated ridge of Seefin hill which extends southwards from Ballycastle to the east of the Ballinglen valley has an extensive field system along with two court tombs and two large round cairns. South of Seefin the blanket bog extends and deepens across a broad level area between 100 – 120m altitude in Annaghbeg where no field walls were visible. East of Seefin the blanket bog extends across the twin low hills of Gallowshill and Barnhill where field walls occur with two court tombs. North of Barnhill the ground dips down to a basin of deep peat in Lissadrone, devoid of field walls. The greatest concentration of walls and associated monuments occur across the elevated plateau of Carrowmore and the lower Rathlackan plateau which together include all the higher ground between Bunatrahir and Lackan Bays. Carrowmore - Rathlackan This complex of field systems (Figure 2 & 3) could be divided into two separate areas. The higher ridge in the west referred to here as Carrowmore includes parts of seven townlands – Kilbride, Carrowneden, Carrowcor, Doonadoba, Knockboha, Conaghra and Carrowmore. The lower plateau to the east referred to here as Rathlackan covers parts of Creevagh, Rathlackan, Beltra and Castletown. The Carrowmore hill is a wide undulating N – S ridge with a height of 186m and peat cover generally confined to above about 120m on the slopes which drop steeply on the Southwest and West sides and more stepped to the North. On the east there is a steep drop to the peat covered Rathlackan plateau at a height of between 110 and 130m. To the Southeast the ground drops gradually to the 144 Lissadrone basin. The peat cover is mostly uneven cutover or cutaway but in the central area it still survives up to 2m deep. In Rathlackan it is mostly cutaway peat but there are pockets up to 1.3m deep while there is a small area of deeper basin type peat to the Southwest of the fields. Carrowmore The Carrowmore field system (Figure 2) has a total linear length of 8.5kms of walls and six associated house sites (H6 – 11). There is also a large round cairn (site B), a possible megalithic cist covered by a cairn (site A) and Carrowmore wedge tomb Ma125. Carrowmacshane wedge tomb Ma126 is 850m Southwest of Ma125. Doonadoba court tomb Ma122 is located on the peat free slope beneath forestry between the Carrowmore and Rathlackan systems. The extent of the system is limited on the lower slopes by the lack of peat and land reclamation and to the Southeast by forestry. The field system is dominated by a series of long roughly parallel walls varying from 90m to 250m apart aligned NNW – SSE with some transverse walls connecting adjacent parallels. The long walls tend to hold their alignment regardless of topography. Occasionally irregularities can be related to topography e.g. the cross wall extending west from just south of H10 curves southwards to avoid a low scarp and rock outcrop. A series of sudden turns and kinks in the parallel wall extending north from the west end of that cross wall however has no apparent explanation. Although there are few completely enclosed fields evident there seems to have been great variation in field size, the larger fields tending to be on the higher plateau. The field in the centre that includes both site A and H10 is 7.2 ha and the adjoining field to the Northeast is 12.5 ha. Neither appears to have been subdivided. The long stripe west of the first field is 650 – 700m long and may have subdivisions under the deep peat and it does have some short irregular walls in the east side. On the west side of the hill three roughly parallel walls on average 90m apart seem to indicate smaller fields. Groups of short irregular walls North of H6 on the north slopes and some around H11 in the southwest indicate quite small plots. On the west side a long wall incorporates a curvilinear enclosure 55m N-S by 32m E-W. Within the enclosure a circular 6.5m diameter house H7 is attached to the west of the enclosure by a straight wall. On the outside of the enclosure a 50m long wall connects it to a 9.5m diameter circular house H8. Further south of H7 and H8 two portions of a small earthen bank and ditch, 150m long in total, was aligned E – W. Being much smaller than the stone walls, the ditch varying from 0.25m to 0.4m deep and up to 0.8m wide may have been a drainage feature. A section exposed in an old quarry showed a lens of peat 0.04m to 0.1m deep beneath the bank. It could not however be stratigraphically related to any of the walls. Rathlackan At Rathlackan (Figure 2 & 3) the field system incorporates three court tombs; Rathlackan excavated site Ma116 and two in Castletown, Ma107 and Ma109. Outside the fields on peat free land the pair in Lecarrowntemple Ma16 and Ma17 are 1km to the S, Doonadoba Ma122 is on the steep slope to the west and Creevagh wedge tomb Ma120 is 700m to the East. Site E in Creevagh may be a ruined megalith with a chamber 2.3m wide facing ENE. Site C is a small irregular mostly concealed cairn 145 about 6m by 4m incorporating a number of large stone slabs. Eleven house sites are associated with the fields. The field system with a total length of 4.7kms of walls is mainly rectilinear with a dominant N – S alignment and walls mostly 130m to 150m apart. Field size varies from 3 ha for that incorporating Ma107 to 1.4 ha for the field west of that. The southern boundary of these two fields is formed by a wall that runs in a sinuous Southwest to Northeast direction for about 500m and the turns sharply northwards. From the Southwest it runs into the South end of the tomb cairn and continues from midway on the East of the cairn. The staggered nature of the junction of this wall with the N – S wall west of the tomb suggests the latter was built subsequently to the sinuous wall. The Rathlackan tomb has a D-shaped enclosure wall, 20m by 20m, attached to the N side of the cairn, in which there was a small square house H13 (Figure 10). Just 200m to the east another small 3m diameter round house, Beltra H16 (Figure 18), is within a curvilinear enclosure 70m by 40m at the end of a field wall. Further to the North at site D a curvilinear wall may have been a complete enclosure as a modern road runs along the west side. Incorporated into this wall are two orthostatic jambs, 0.9m to 1.0m apart and 1.25m high from the sub peat ground level, support a large lintel stone 2.2m by 1.0m and up to 0.3m thick. This is referred to as ‘Queen’s Grave’ by Aldridge (1961, 86). It is clearly part of the wall making an elaborate entrance although there are a lot of stones around the structure covered by peat, giving the possibility it may have been part of some other structure. Seefin ‘Seefin’ hill includes parts of Carrowkibbock Upper, Rathoonagh, Ballinglen, Aghaleague, Carrowcuilleen and Annaghmore townlands (Figure 4). It is a steep sided flat topped hill 237m high. The very steep west slopes are mostly peat free or have been reclaimed as are the lower slopes on the east side while the less steep northern spur has mostly cutaway peat. Elsewhere there are large tracts of uncut peat on much of the ridge top while the East and South sides are a chequer board of old turf banks often over 2m high. A total length of 5.6kms of walls were located on all areas of the hill (Figure 4) but a more extensive probing operation would undoubtedly reveal a more complete pattern in areas of deep peat. On the N slope there are two broadly parallel meandering walls, varying from 100m to 200m apart, running upslope with some offset cross walls. On the S end a straight wall almost 700m long, but with a gap in the middle where it has not been probed, maintains a straight course regardless of topography, the S section running up the steep slope and the N end following the contour. On either side of this two straight offset cross walls, all between 110m to 150m long, may indicate a more regular pattern of walls. Elsewhere the walls do not have a distinct pattern but many continue under uncut peat and have not been probed further. No major area of the hill is devoid of walls and the general indication is of larger rather than small fields. A circular enclosure 40m d. is located on a fairly level terrace at a height of 150m on the N hillside. 420m upslope from it at a height of 185m a house site, Carrowkibbock Upper H20 (Figure 19), is attached to the end of a field wall. There are two court tombs on the hill, Carrowkibbock Upper Ma108 on the N side and Ballinglen Ma121 at the end of a field wall on the South slope. 146 Two similar large round cairns are interestingly located on the ridge top 700m apart but not intervisible. Aghaleague, 3.7m high and 19m d. has spectacular views from the Northeast to the South but slightly rising ground restricts the view elsewhere. Carrowcuilleen Site B, 3m high and 20m d., has views from the Southeast around to the Northwest. Barnhill A total of 1.4kms of walls were located in Barnhill and Aghaleague in shallow cutaway peat (Figure 5). A regular system of N – S parallels mostly about 150m apart with some E – W cross walls is indicated on Barnhill. The extent of the system is limited by reclamation on the South and East sides, including around Barnhill Upper court tomb Ma27. To the N the land dips down to a basin of deep peat in Lissadrone but the walls could not be traced any further under the deeper peat. To the W a single wall runs upslope from NE to SW towards the largely destroyed Aghaleague court tomb Ma26 although on opposite sides of the low hill. Occasional isolated upright stones in the vicinity may be remnants of walls. Castletown The Castletown system has a total length of 1.5kms of walls in Castletown, Cabintown and Ballymachugh in mostly shallow cutaway peat although there are some uncut banks up to 1.5m high. At least two separate phases of boundaries are evident (Figure 6), the primary system built on mineral soil and the later on a thin layer of peat. The earlier system has three parallel walls running NW – SE from the shore, averaging 175m apart with two cross walls forming fields, partly bounded by the coast, of 1.5ha and 2.2ha. Short walls adjacent to both H2 and Site A are also on mineral soil. The large 9.5m d. Ballymachugh round house H2 is on mineral soil (Figure 9) and probably also the 8.5m d. Castletown round house H1. A curving generally N – S wall cuts across one of the parallels and cross walls and is built on a thin layer of peat. To the west of H1 a slightly curving N – S wall with a semicircular incomplete enclosure, 15m by 20m, at the N end is also on peat. A curving 60m long earthen bank and ditch partly extends across the open end of the enclosure but the stratigraphical relationship is not clear. The 3m wide by 0.5m high bank is on the E side of the 1.1m wide by 0.5m deep ditch. A 50m length of earthen bank 1m wide and 0.5m high S of Cabintown Site A had no apparent ditch but it is not clear which phase it belongs to. The Cabintown site A (Figure 8) consists of twenty six large erratic boulders set upright in an incomplete 32m wide sub triangular shape, which vary in height from 0.32m to 1.01m. Knockaun A total length of 350m of walls consists of a curving wall extending away from the cliff edge with two short offset walls 90m apart. They are under very shallow peat with no associated monuments, the nearest being a pair of barrows 500m to the NW. 147 Construction Techniques Often it is not possible to determine the nature of wall construction due to concealment, collapse and occasional robbing. Where they are sufficiently exposed a variety of construction types are evident, sometimes in the same system and even in the same wall but often the construction seems to be determined by the type of stone available. The walls can be divided into different types: 1. Walls can appear as a collapsed linear cairn with no orthostatic stones or foundation course visible although low foundation courses may be concealed by the collapse. This wall type was common at Castletown where a lot of sea rolled stones from the adjacent shore were used. Similar walls were less common on Carrowmore and Rathlackan where the local sandstone was used. At Rathlackan court tomb the excavated western portion of the enclosure wall abutting the cairn was built of horizontally laid stones which survived up to 0.7m high and was from 1.0 to 1.5m wide. 2. Single stone walling with a foundation of regularly set boulders. This was common at both Barnhill and Seefin (Figure 7) where erratic granite boulders were set at intervals with smaller loose stones between. 3. Single stone walls with set upright slabs or blocks aligned with the wall at intervals. Often seen at Carrowmore and Rathlackan and also in the single wall near Aghaleague court tomb. The N – S wall to the west of Rathlackan court tomb had frequent slabs up to 1m long with smaller stones between. 4. Single stone walls with slabs set upright transversely to the wall. Only two clear examples were found – the straight wall SE of H11 on Carrowmore, where slabs up to 0.8m wide and 0.5m high were set at intervals of 0.6m to 6m, and a section S of Site C in Rathlackan. 5. Double stone walls with a foundation of a double row of set stones or slabs were common on both Rathlackan and Carrowmore such as the field wall incorporated in Doonadoba H10 (Figure 16) which has a width of 0.65m to 1.0m. 6. Double stone walls with a foundation of two widely spaced rows of facing stones with rubble between were mostly found at Rathlackan. The best example is the enclosure incorporating the lintelled entrance Site D where the E – W straight section is 2.0m wide (Figure 7) but the remainder averages 1.0m wide. 7. Earthen banks and ditches. Only two examples, already mentioned, were located - one at Castletown and the smaller section at Carrowmore that was possibly a drain. 8. A single instance of earthen bank without a ditch was also found at Castletown. Size Without excavation it is difficult to be certain of the original size of the walls although probed profiles can indicate the volume of stone used. Where foundations are visible the width is mostly 1m or less but can be up to 2m. In modern dry stone wall building it is recommended that the foundation width be half the wall height (McAfee 1997, 103). Occasionally they have survived to a height of 0.8m to 1.0m which would be the minimum original height. 148 Wall Gaps Because of concealment and collapse it is extremely difficult to identify wall gaps but two clear examples of entrance gaps were located. In Rathlackan the lintelled entrance Site D was in a probable enclosure. On Carrowmore a clear wall gap was located in a long N – S field wall 15m S of H10 and 6m N of the junction with the cross wall to the west. It consists of two upright sandstone jamb stones 0.71m and 0.8m high set transversely to the wall with a gap 0.7m wide (Figure 7). There is possibly a third on Seefin where there is a 0.8m wide gap flanked by two large set blocks to the N of the house H20. Because of this it is likely that gaps were a feature of the field walls but other examples could only be found by excavation. Associated Structures House Sites Twenty house sites were discovered within the field systems which exhibited a great variety in size, form and possibly also in function. Some were clearly exposed in cutaway, others had only a couple of stones visible and were located by probing. A good example is the Rathlackan excavation site H13. During the original survey only the tips of a few stones jutted through the peat but after probing the complete outline with the entrance was planned. This compared well with the subsequently excavated structure. Twelve of the sites were circular and could be grouped into three small with internal diameters of approximately 3 – 4.5m, three medium from 6 – 7m diameter and six larger between 8.5 – 9.5m diameter. This gives a huge variation in internal areas of from 7m2 to 71m2. The smallest H16 in the Rathlackan system was unique in that it had a ditch outside the wall (Figure 18). It had a clear entrance facing NNE and was within an enclosure. One of the largest, H2 in the Castletown system, had been uncovered during turf cutting in the 1950s when all the loose stones from a wall about 0.3m high were taken away. This exposed the wall foundation of a double facing of stones set solidly in the ground (Figure 9). The stones included sandstone, granite erratic and sea rolled stones. A similar building technique was used in the smaller H9 on Carrowmore hill (Figure 17). The only two rectilinear sites were both in Rathlackan, including the excavated site beside the court tomb and the larger 7.5m by 6m H15 built with a double row of orthostatic slabs (Figure 12). Three sites were similarly built with a curved wall against a straight field wall giving a semicircular or D-shaped structure. All were very different sizes in separate field systems. The smallest H3 (4.5m by 2.5m, Figure 13) was in the Rathlackan system, the medium sized H20 (8.5m by 5m, Figure 19) was on Seefin and the largest H10 (11m by 7.5m, Figure 16) was on Carrowmore hill. The other three sites in the Rathlackan system are oval or egg shaped and are similar in being built along the line of a field wall but with a gap in that wall to either side. The largest H12 (12.5m long and 2.5 – 5m wide, Figure 11) may have been built with stones taken from the field wall as turf cutting after the original survey revealed a layer of peat under some of the stones. Both H4 and H5 (Figures 14 & 15) are close to and on the same field wall as H3. Three of the round houses on Carrowmore, H6, H8 and H11, are all connected to the ends of field walls. 149 There is no clear pattern to the distribution of the house sites. Three are within enclosures, the small H13 and H16 in Rathlackan and the larger H7 on Carrowmore while a fourth, H14 in Rathlackan has a curving wall to the west that might have been the remains of an enclosure (Figure 2). The 40m wide circular enclosure on Seefin had no visible house but the existence of a structure under the 1m depth of peat cannot be excluded. Some houses are clustered together – H9 and H10 on Carrowmore are 10m apart although in separate fields. In Rathlackan H17 and H18 round houses are also 10m apart, H3 H4 and H5 are in a 38m long row while H14, H15 and H16 are all within 50m of each other. The majority are sited on flat land but the H17 and H18 pair and H7 and H8 are all terraced into sloping ground. Of the six on Carrowmore four are on the terraced slopes and only two on the more exposed higher ground. Megalithic Monuments A variety of megalithic monuments are located within the field system areas and many can be directly related to the walls. The Carrowmore – Rathlackan area has the greatest number and variety, including six court tombs, three wedge tombs, a round cairn plus three other possible or unclassified sites (Figure 2). The six court tombs are all on the lower plateau area. The pair of Lecarrowntemple sites, Ma16 and Ma17, are in a peat free area and the furthest from the walls although there are uncertain remains about 400m to the North of them. Doonadoba Ma122 is also on peat free land on the lower slopes of the Carrowmore hill. Castletown Ma109 has a long gallery with imbricated sides aligned N – S directly on the line of a field wall. It is likely the wall continued towards the tomb but the land in the immediate vicinity had been ploughed and reclaimed. The Castletown Ma107 site is a possible dual court tomb aligned NNW – SSE and has a field wall directly connected. At the South end of the cairn the wall joins at an aligned long regular set stone and the wall continues from midway on the east side of the cairn. The Rathlackan tomb has the enclosure wall surrounding H13 attached to the North side of the cairn. Of the three wedge tombs Creevagh Ma120 is on peat free land to the east. Carrowmacshane Ma126 is in very shallow peat and only a short stretch of uncertain wall was found close to the tomb. While this might indicate robbing of the walls to construct the tomb the third wedge tomb Carrowmore Ma125 has very well preserved walls close by including a curving wall less than 10m to the E. To the N of the tomb the land had been reclaimed. The Knockboha Site B round cairn (21.5m diameter and 3.5m high) is prominently sited on the East shoulder of the hill overlooking the Rathlackan plateau but gradually rising ground restricts visibility westwards. While it does not have any definite field walls within 300m the mature coniferous forestry immediately to the South prevented any search and to the East the ground drops very steeply to peat free land. The absence of walls to the N and W could possibly be explained as due to robbing for the cairn. Carrowmore Site A, sited just 50m from the highest point on the hill is a largely concealed uneven cairn about 13m N – S by 10m E – W with the corner of a very large horizontal slab at least 2m long 150 supported by an orthostat visible under the peat at the Northwest end. It is possibly a megalithic cist and is completely enclosed within a large rectilinear 7.2ha field. Site C, just 100m SW of Rathlackan court tomb, is an uncertain site with a low irregular cairn about 6m N – S by 4m with some apparently set stones and some loose stone slabs up to 1m in size that may have been disturbed from the monument. There is a gap in the adjacent section of a N – S field wall which runs to the E of the site although the ends of the wall appear to curve in towards the cairn. Site E is located just 30m W of the field wall that incorporates the three house sites H3 H4 and H5 and is possibly a ruined megalith with a chamber 2.3m wide facing ENE. Other stones closer to the site may be remnants of walls. On Seefin hill there are two court tombs and two round cairns (Figure 4). The Ballinglen court tomb Ma121 has a cairn at least 28m long and 11m wide aligned WNW – ESE with a probable court at the W end. A field wall extends from the rear of the cairn in a SE direction. On the North side of Seefin the Carrowkibbock Upper Ma108 court tomb is also aligned with an E – W field wall which seems to end 120m from the tomb. The tomb has at least two chambers and a court at the E end while a modern drain and fence cuts through the W end. The round cairn, Aghaleague site A, is less than 10m Northeast of a long NW – SE field wall. No field walls were noted within 60m of the second round cairn, Carrowcuilleen site B, but the deep uncut peat in the vicinity could possibly conceal some. Two court tombs are located within the Barnhill area (Figure 5). Land reclamation around the fine Barnhill Upper court tomb Ma27 would have destroyed any walls closer than the N – S parallel that ends just over 100m to the N. The closest wall to the mostly destroyed Aghaleague Ma26 court tomb is 200m away but occasional isolated uprights in the vicinity may be wall remnants. The only area of substantial field walls without any megalithic tombs nearby is Castletown and it is surprising that there are no known megaliths in this low lying area between Bunatrahir Bay and Downpatrick Head. Discussion All of the field systems with their associated house structures and megalithic monuments exhibit a great variety of archaeological material and no doubt reflect intensive prehistoric activity in this area over a prolonged period of time. A precise date for the construction of the field walls is difficult to determine and individual walls may have been built at different times even within the same system. This is evident at Castletown (Figure 6) where there were at least two phases of construction, one on the sub peat soil and a second on a thin layer of peat. The date of the initiation of peat growth in this area has not been established. This is also the only system, apart from the short stretch of wall in Knockaun that does not have any associated megalithic tombs. The Cabintown Site A (Figure 8) is difficult to categorise, being too irregular in shape to be regarded as a stone circle and it is unlikely to be the remains of a walled enclosure as the stones used are much larger than in any of the field walls in the vicinity. The only 151 other associated monuments in this system are the two large circular house sites which could be comparable to the middle Bronze Age Belderg Beg site. On Seefin the field systems are more likely to be Neolithic in date, not only because of the two associated court tombs. On the south side of the hill a number of pine tree stumps are visible in the base of the peat and are clearly later than the field walls beneath. To the south of the hill the peat with the pine stumps extends across a broad level area where there are no field walls evident. The depth of peat beneath the trees becomes progressively deeper up to 1.8m. Two pine trees from each area have been dated. In Annaghmore a tree directly on top of a wall was dated to 3330-2870 cal BC (UCD-C26, 4350±60BP), and a second tree in the base of the peat just 3m from a wall was 3340-2920 cal BC(UCD-C50, 4440±60BP), Caulfield et al 1998. An identical date to this was obtained for a tree further to the south in Annaghbeg that grew on 1.8m of peat (UCD-C24), while a second tree on 1.4m of peat was 2470-2050 cal BC (UCD-C38, 3820±60BP). This indicates the peat was established in this area by middle Neolithic times. While the court tombs are on the hill sides the two similar round cairns are more prominently sited although neither is on the highest point of the hill. It would seem that, along with the similar Knockboha cairn on Carrowmore hill, they were deliberately sited to be visible from mutually exclusive areas. The dating of such cairns is problematic although O’Sullivan and Downey (2011) argue that a significant number could be classified as Passage Tombs. The central depression on the top of the Carrowcuilleen cairn Site B could indicate a collapsed chamber. The Aghaleague cairn Site A however has a surrounding ditch 2.0 – 2.5m wide and at least 1.25m deep which was located by probing. In Barnhill the only associated monuments are two court tombs while in the Carrowmore – Rathlackan area the greater variety of associated monuments indicates a more complex landscape. As elsewhere it is difficult to date the construction of all the field walls but the association with both court and wedge tombs could indicate use from at least the middle Neolithic into the Bronze Age. The excavations at the Rathlackan court tomb have shown ample artifactual and radiocarbon evidence for middle Neolithic activity with earlier activity hinted at by the presence of two sherds of an early Neolithic carinated bowl from the court. The house structure beside the tomb was dated to the late Neolithic from charcoal on the well preserved hearth and similar dates came from the court and rear chamber. The enclosure wall surrounding the house and built onto the side of the tomb may also have been built at this time. Use of the tomb in the Early Bronze Age was indicated by sherds of a Vase Urn in the rear chamber and a Cordoned Urn in the front chamber. However whether the surrounding fields were continuously used and inhabited throughout this long period is not yet clear. It is likely there were alterations to the field walls over time for example the wall extending from the Castletown Ma107 court tomb would seem to have been built after the tomb and prior to the N-S wall to the west of the tomb. The great variety in shape and size of the seventeen house structures in this area no doubt reflects varying functions as well as dates. The only secure dating evidence is for the excavated H13 which gave two late Neolithic dates of 2880-2490 cal BC (Beta-48102) and 2870-2450 cal BC (Beta-63836). Because of its unique small square shape, absence of artifacts and very high quantity of charcoal this site may have had a particular function in relation to activities associated with the tomb rather than as a regular dwelling site. Two other sites within enclosures and three round houses attached to the ends of field walls are likely to be contemporary with those walls. The six free standing structures are difficult to stratigraphically relate to the walls. Two structures are built against a long field wall 152 and with different building techniques, possibly indicating a later construction date to the field wall. One of these, H10, is built in the corner of a large field on the upper slopes of Carrowmore and it is overlain by a cairn 5m diameter and 0.8m high that may be a clearance cairn, (Figure 16). The three remaining house sites may also be later than the field walls as they may be built with stones robbed from those walls. The unusual egg shaped H12 (Figure 11) has a thin layer of peat under some stones and the H5 site (Figure 15) is comparable in shape and size to the structure in Trench 25 of the Céide Visitor Centre site. The overall variety of field walls, house structures and other monuments in this area no doubt indicates a complex history of activities over a long period of time from at least the middle Neolithic into the Bronze Age. 153 References Aldridge, R.B. 1961. Some Megalithic and other sites in Counties Mayo and Sligo. Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, 29, 83-90. Aldridge, R.B. 1965. Megalithic and other sites in Counties Mayo and Galway. Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, 31, 11-15. Byrne, M.J.B. 1986. The Pre-Bog Archaeology of the Ballycastle-Palmerstown Area of North Mayo, Volumes 1 & 2, Unpublished MA Thesis, UCD. Caulfield, S., O’Donnell, R. G. and Mitchell, P. I. 1998. 14C Dating of a Neolithic Field System at Céide Fields, County Mayo, Ireland. Radiocarbon 40: 629-640. De Valera, R. 1951. A Group of ‘Horned Cairns’ near Ballycastle, Co. Mayo. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 81, 161-197. McAfee, P. 1997. Irish stone Walls History Building Conservation, Dublin. O’Sullivan, M. and Downey, L. 2011. Summit Cairns. Archaeology Ireland, Vol 25, No. 3, 20-23. 154 Survey Illustrations: Figure 1: Overall location map of all walls and tombs. 155 Figure 2: Carrowmore – Rathlackan walls with houses, tombs and other sites. Figure 3: 3D model with 2x vertical relief. Facing south, showing Carrowmore (right) and Rathlackan (left). 156 Figure 4: Seefin walls with associated sites. 157 Figure 5: Barnhill walls Figure 6: Castletown walls 158 Figure 7: Walls from the study area: left - wall with spaced boulders at Seefin; top right - double wall at Queen’s Grave; bottom right - gap at Carrowmore 159 160 Figure 8: Cabintown Site A. 161 Figure 9: Ballymachugh H2, Figure 10: Rathlackan H13 post excavation 162 Figure 11: Rathlackan sites H12 Figure 12: Rathlackan H15, 163 Figure 13: Creevagh H3, Figure 14: Creevagh H4, 164 Figure 15: Creevagh H5, Figure 16: Doonadoba H10, 165 Figure 17: Doonadoba H9, Figure 18: Beltra H16 166 Figure 19: Carrowkibbock Upper H20. 167