Cairn, Glenquin, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Cairns
On the summit plateau of Slieve Roe in County Clare, a small cairn sits with a quiet, almost obstinate presence.
It is not large enough to dominate the landscape, yet it is precisely positioned to survey it, commanding wide views from east to south across the semi-karst terrain below. Karst, the distinctive limestone landscape shaped by centuries of water erosion into pavements, clints, and grikes, is characteristic of this part of Clare, and the plateau setting gives the cairn an exposed, elemental quality that is easy to underestimate on paper.
The structure is subcircular in plan, measuring roughly 7.7 metres east to west and 7.2 metres north to south, with a circumference of 21.6 metres and a height of 1.8 metres. It is built from medium and large stones, loosely piled over a rubble base, and around its perimeter there are several possible kerbstones set upright on edge, the most clearly visible of these on the western side. Kerbstones of this kind are often associated with prehistoric funerary cairns, where they served to define the boundary of the mound and retain the material within, though whether that is the function here remains unconfirmed. The cairn was documented and formally reported to the National Monuments Service in 2006 by Elizabeth Gills, bringing it into the official record after what had presumably been a long, unremarked existence on the hilltop.