Archaeology
| Trackway
in Corlea, Co. Longford |
 |
Our peatlands are a history book. Peat is renowned for preserving
the organic and inorganic remains of settlements, including
tombs, farms, trackways, implements and bog bodies. Perhaps
lesser known is its ability to preserve environmental information
in datable deposits of pollen and volcanic ash. This information
is of international significance and could possibly assist in
predicting future climate changes.
The surviving peatlands in Northern Ireland today are much
smaller than they once were. Although hundreds of archaeological
sites and individual objects have been found, thousands of other
objects have been destroyed in the gradual drainage, reclamation
and turf cutting that has been going on since the late 18th
century.
In 2003 the Environment and Heritage Service commissioned
a report to assess peatland archaeology in Northern Ireland.
This report recorded 743 registered museum finds from the
following counties:
|
Antrim
|
|
|
Armagh
|
|
|
Down
|
|
|
Fermanagh
|
|
|
Londonderry
|
|
|
Tyrone
|
|
Although the majority of finds are from Antrim and Londonderry,
this is partly due to the fact that Ordnance Survey extensively
surveyed both counties in the 1830s, collecting archaeological
information as they went. Antiquarians working from Belfast
formed collections from objects found on these surveys, many
of which eventually found their way into museums. It is probable
that a vast number of similar finds may have been lost from
peatlands in other counties, particularly the widespread areas
in Tyrone and Fermanagh.
This area of the website groups the archaeological information
found in the peatlands of Northern Ireland as follows:
- Pollen - vegetation and climate history
- Pre-bog farming
- Timber features - trackways and logboats
- Tombs and stone circles
- Bog bodies
- Occasional finds