Enclosure, Garbally (Coshma By.), Co. Limerick

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Enclosures

Enclosure, Garbally (Coshma By.), Co. Limerick

Some places exist on the archaeological record without existing in any visible sense at all.

In a pasture field in the townland of Garbally, in the barony of Coshma in County Limerick, there is believed to be an enclosure, the kind of roughly circular or oval earthwork that in Ireland typically marks the site of an early medieval farmstead or place of habitation. Yet there is nothing to see. No bank, no ditch, no worn ring in the grass. The site does not appear on Ordnance Survey historic maps, and recent aerial and satellite imagery confirms that the ground surface gives nothing away. What makes this place quietly compelling is precisely that: it is a site defined almost entirely by its own absence.

The enclosure came to attention not through excavation or fieldwork on the ground, but through the examination of aerial photographs taken on 3 November 1984, during a survey conducted for the Bórd Gáis Éireann Curraleigh West-Limerick gas pipeline. Aerial photography of this kind, carried out at low altitude across a transect of landscape, has been responsible for identifying hundreds of previously unrecorded sites across Ireland. The technique works because buried features, the filled-in ditches and compressed soils of old earthworks, affect how crops or grass grow above them, producing subtle differences in colour or height known as cropmarks. A cropmark, essentially a ghostly outline readable from the air but invisible at ground level, was indeed captured here on a Google Earth image dated 5 April 2006, partially revealing the shape of a possible enclosure. By the time later imagery was taken, between 2005 and 2012 and again in September 2020, even that faint trace had gone. The site is catalogued as Site No. 039134 and sits roughly 117 metres north of the townland boundary with Ballinlee North, and about 84 metres southeast of a separate recorded enclosure.

There is, practically speaking, very little for a visitor to find here. The field is pasture, and there are no surface remains to orient yourself by. The site is of most interest to those drawn to the archaeology of invisibility, the long tradition of Irish landscape study that treats a faint line on a photograph as seriously as a standing stone. If you are curious about cropmark archaeology more generally, the conditions that make such marks readable tend to occur in dry spells during spring or early summer, when differential soil moisture becomes legible from above. On the ground in Garbally, the record exists only in a pipeline survey photograph from 1984 and a fleeting satellite image from a spring morning in 2006, compiled into the national record by Fiona Rooney and uploaded in April 2021.

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