Megalithic tomb - wedge tomb, Derrynabaunshy, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Megalithic Tombs
In the townland of Derrynabaunshy in County Mayo, a wedge tomb survives from the Neolithic or early Bronze Age, a structure old enough that the civilisation which raised it left no written account of its purpose.
Wedge tombs are the most numerous of Ireland's megalithic tomb types, built roughly between 2500 and 500 BC, and they take their name from their characteristic shape: a roofed gallery that narrows and lowers from one end to the other, typically oriented to the west or south-west. They are found in concentrations across the west of Ireland, and Mayo holds a considerable share of them, many sitting quietly in upland or marginal land that has seen little disturbance since the monuments were first raised.
Beyond its classification and its location in Derrynabaunshy, the specific details of this particular tomb, its dimensions, condition, and any finds or features recorded during fieldwork, are not currently available in the public record. That absence is itself telling. Many of Mayo's megalithic monuments sit in landscapes that have never been systematically excavated, known to local people and to the occasional fieldworker but otherwise largely unstudied. The townland name itself, likely derived from Irish, points to a place with its own layered past, though without further documentation it would be speculation to read too much into it.