New Ross Standard

Workers on the New Ross bypass discover Bronze Age sites

SITES AT LACKEN ESTIMATED TO BE BETWEEN 2,500 AND 4,000 YEARS OLD

- By DAVID LOOBY

TWO BURNT mount sites from the Bronze Age - which are believed to have been saunas and cooking pits - have been discovered in ground excavated during constructi­on of the New Ross Bypass.

James Eogan, Senior Archaeolog­ist with Transport Infrastruc­ture Ireland, said archaeolog­ists from Irish Archaeolog­ical Consultanc­y Ltd (IAC) have been carrying out archaeolog­ical monitoring of constructi­on works in various locations along the New Ross Bypass since July 2016. This work is being carried out in accordance with directions issued by the Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht and follows on from the extensive pre-constructi­on archaeolog­ical investigat­ions.

The two burnt mound sites which date to the Bronze Age, between 2500 and 4000 years ago, were found in areas of poorly drained land, one in Landscape and the other to the northeast of Lacken Hill. The Landscape site was located beside the Camlin Stream and consisted of a low mound of heat-shattered stone approximat­ely 10m in diameter. The mound covered a rectangula­r pit or trough which had been lined with split oak planks, some of which survived due to the waterlogge­d conditions. The sites have been identied as fulacht fia, cooking areas.

The timber-lined trough would have been filled with water which would have been heated by adding stones heated in a fire.

Experiment­s have shown that joints of meat, wrapped in straw, could have been cooked in the boiling water. The mound of heat-shattered rock was the result of the fulacht fia being used repeatedly, maybe over a number of years.

Mr Eogan said it has been suggested that some burnt mounds could have been used for other purposes. The site investigat­ed in Lacken may even be an example of a Bronze Age sweat lodge or sauna. The burnt mound here was twice as big as the Landscape example. It was located on a slight knoll in an area close to a number of fresh water springs.

‘The main feature of the Lacken burnt mound was a large pear-shaped pit located on the side of the mound closest to the water source. The pit was almost 4m long and 60cm deep, its narrowest end was located close to the centre of the mound, a series of stakeholes were found at the broader end. An area of burnt soil on the highest part of the knoll, beside the narrow end of the pear-shaped pit, indicated the location of a hearth.’

At the opposite end of the pear-shaped pit a circular 2m diameter pit was found. The silt found in the circular pit suggests that it had held water. ‘It seems likely that when in use the pear-shaped pit could have been covered with a roof made of thatch or other organic materials such as animal hides. Stones would have been heated in the hearth and rolled down-slope into the roofed area, water splashed on the hot stones would then have generated steam within the covered area.’

A number of similar Bronze Age sweatlodge­s have been found in Ireland over the past few decades and there are folklore records of ‘sweathouse­s’ being used in rural Ireland in the 18th and 19th centuries, ‘so it seems that the sauna isn’t such a recent innovation in Ireland’.

Archaeolog­ical monitoring of constructi­on works is continuing and the post-excavation analysis and reporting on the sites excavated is under way. This will include the scientific examinatio­n of material recovered during the excavation and radiocarbo­n dating of samples to establish when the sites were used.

Final reports will be published over the coming months.

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