Cairn - boundary cairn, Streamhill, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Cairns
Near the summit of Carron Mountain, on the border between Cork and Limerick, a cairn was recorded on an Ordnance Survey map in 1937 and has not been reliably located since.
That ambiguity is itself part of what makes it interesting. Cairns of this kind, loose mounds of stone heaped up at intervals along a boundary, served as unmistakable landmarks in an era before fencing or GPS, their meaning legible to anyone who knew the landscape. This one was apparently part of a group of five, strung out near the mountain's upper reaches to mark where one county ended and the other began.
The 1937 OS six-inch map, a meticulous mid-twentieth-century revision of the nineteenth-century Ordnance Survey, captured the cairn's position at a moment when such features were still visible enough to map. Whether it was already ancient by that point, or a relatively modern boundary marker, the notes do not say. What is clear is that four companion cairns were recorded in the same area, suggesting a deliberate series rather than a single incidental heap. Boundary cairns like these occupy a peculiar category: too functional to be ceremonial monuments, too embedded in the land to be easily dismissed, and just ambiguous enough in origin that they resist neat classification.