
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Cathy Moore & Dr Ben Gearey discuss Ireland’s wetland archaeology in Amplify Archaeology Podcast Episode 20
Cathy Moore & Dr Ben Gearey discuss Ireland’s wetland archaeology in Amplify Archaeology Podcast Episode 20
Bogs and wetlands are one of the most iconic, and characteristically Irish, landscapes. Almost 1/6th of the country is covered by bog, and it is particularly significant in the midlands. Bogs have long served a variety of functions to past and present societies, from places to gather resources like fuel, rushes and reeds or to hunt. They also have a liminal aspect, forming boundaries and dangerous places that were, and often still sadly are, treacherous to the unwary and unfortunate. They are also places of community effort, meitheal, with real intangible cultural heritage all of their own. They have inspired artists, writers and poets for centuries.
Archaeological sites in wetlands vary from wooden trackways, platforms and bridges, to fish traps and fulachta fiadh. One of the defining characteristics of wetland sites is the high quality preservation of organic remains, including human remains as we see so poignantly in the case of ‘bog bodies’. In a sense, the bogs also act as environmental time capsules, as they preserve important palaeoenvironmental material such as botanical and animal remains, and microfossils like pollen. The process of wetland archaeology allows us to investigate and reconstruct past people’s landscapes, culture, and lives in sometimes astonishing detail.
Since the mid-20th century, the increasing industrialisation of peat harvesting has created employment and prosperity for many communities, though it has led to the loss of innumerable archaeological monuments, and the bogs themselves drained and scoured into great brown deserts. Now the immense harvesters are beginning to be silenced and stilled, the bogs are to be transformed once more, some will be ‘rehabilitated’ or ‘rewetted’, others will be planted with windfarms to generate another form of power. These changes will pose more challenges to what is left of the important archaeological and cultural heritage, and it is no exaggeration to say this may be our last chance to identify, record and understand many of these wetland archaeology sites.
In this episode of Amplify Archaeology Podcast, Neil was joined for a Zoom chat with Cathy Moore and Dr. Ben Gearey. Cathy is a highly experienced wetland archaeologist and wooden finds specialist who has excavated remarkable sites such as the trackway complex Edercloon in County Longford, and Drumclay Crannog in County Fermanagh, as well as numerous others including co-directing the excavation of a beautifully preserved watermill at Kilbegly in County Roscommon with Neil. Ben is a Lecturer in Environmental Archaeology, in the Department of Archaeology at University College Cork, Ireland. He has a range of research interests, with a particular focus on the archaeological and palaeoenvironmental records of peatlands.
AMPLIFY ARCHAEOLOGY PODCAST
AMPLIFY ARCHAEOLOGY PODCAST
Title: Wetland Archaeology
Duration: 54 mins.
Summary:
During this podcast series we will meet some of Ireland’s archaeologists to discuss the key periods, places and people that tell the story of Ireland, and we’ll gain new insights into the practice and techniques of modern Irish archaeology. This is the twentieth instalment of Amplify Archaeology, previous episodes have featured a miniseries on Newgrange and the Winter Solstice, discussions on excavations at Kilkenny Castle, the Rock of Cashel and Glendalough. We’ve also looked at Ogham, Digital Heritage, Conflict Archaeology, Living History, the Beaker People, History of Food, Passage Tombs, Castles, Mesolithic Ireland and more!
I’d love some feedback, so please do leave a comment below – and if you have any questions about Irish archaeology please do let me know, we can try to answer them in forthcoming episodes. Finally if you enjoyed this podcast I’d be really grateful if you could leave us a review on iTunes, or please share it and tell your friends.
The podcast is an Abarta Heritage production. Due to the ongoing COVID pandemic it was recorded over Zoom with Neil Jackman (the interviewer) Cathy Moore and Dr. Ben Gearey. We are really grateful to Cathy and Ben for their generosity and insights.
….’Our pioneers keep striking
Amplify Archaeology Podcast is also available on
Dig into more stories with Amplify Archaeology Podcast
Episode 21 with Terry O’Hagan
Archaeological Landscapes of St Patrick
Amplify Archaeology
Episode 14 with Maeve Sikora & Matthew Seaver
The National Museum of Ireland
Amplify Archaeology
Episode 12 with Dr. Damian Shiels
Conflict Archaeology
Amplify Archaeology
The post Wetland Archaeology – Amplify Archaeology Podcast – Episode 20 appeared first on Abarta Heritage Home.
4.8
3636 ratings
Cathy Moore & Dr Ben Gearey discuss Ireland’s wetland archaeology in Amplify Archaeology Podcast Episode 20
Cathy Moore & Dr Ben Gearey discuss Ireland’s wetland archaeology in Amplify Archaeology Podcast Episode 20
Bogs and wetlands are one of the most iconic, and characteristically Irish, landscapes. Almost 1/6th of the country is covered by bog, and it is particularly significant in the midlands. Bogs have long served a variety of functions to past and present societies, from places to gather resources like fuel, rushes and reeds or to hunt. They also have a liminal aspect, forming boundaries and dangerous places that were, and often still sadly are, treacherous to the unwary and unfortunate. They are also places of community effort, meitheal, with real intangible cultural heritage all of their own. They have inspired artists, writers and poets for centuries.
Archaeological sites in wetlands vary from wooden trackways, platforms and bridges, to fish traps and fulachta fiadh. One of the defining characteristics of wetland sites is the high quality preservation of organic remains, including human remains as we see so poignantly in the case of ‘bog bodies’. In a sense, the bogs also act as environmental time capsules, as they preserve important palaeoenvironmental material such as botanical and animal remains, and microfossils like pollen. The process of wetland archaeology allows us to investigate and reconstruct past people’s landscapes, culture, and lives in sometimes astonishing detail.
Since the mid-20th century, the increasing industrialisation of peat harvesting has created employment and prosperity for many communities, though it has led to the loss of innumerable archaeological monuments, and the bogs themselves drained and scoured into great brown deserts. Now the immense harvesters are beginning to be silenced and stilled, the bogs are to be transformed once more, some will be ‘rehabilitated’ or ‘rewetted’, others will be planted with windfarms to generate another form of power. These changes will pose more challenges to what is left of the important archaeological and cultural heritage, and it is no exaggeration to say this may be our last chance to identify, record and understand many of these wetland archaeology sites.
In this episode of Amplify Archaeology Podcast, Neil was joined for a Zoom chat with Cathy Moore and Dr. Ben Gearey. Cathy is a highly experienced wetland archaeologist and wooden finds specialist who has excavated remarkable sites such as the trackway complex Edercloon in County Longford, and Drumclay Crannog in County Fermanagh, as well as numerous others including co-directing the excavation of a beautifully preserved watermill at Kilbegly in County Roscommon with Neil. Ben is a Lecturer in Environmental Archaeology, in the Department of Archaeology at University College Cork, Ireland. He has a range of research interests, with a particular focus on the archaeological and palaeoenvironmental records of peatlands.
AMPLIFY ARCHAEOLOGY PODCAST
AMPLIFY ARCHAEOLOGY PODCAST
Title: Wetland Archaeology
Duration: 54 mins.
Summary:
During this podcast series we will meet some of Ireland’s archaeologists to discuss the key periods, places and people that tell the story of Ireland, and we’ll gain new insights into the practice and techniques of modern Irish archaeology. This is the twentieth instalment of Amplify Archaeology, previous episodes have featured a miniseries on Newgrange and the Winter Solstice, discussions on excavations at Kilkenny Castle, the Rock of Cashel and Glendalough. We’ve also looked at Ogham, Digital Heritage, Conflict Archaeology, Living History, the Beaker People, History of Food, Passage Tombs, Castles, Mesolithic Ireland and more!
I’d love some feedback, so please do leave a comment below – and if you have any questions about Irish archaeology please do let me know, we can try to answer them in forthcoming episodes. Finally if you enjoyed this podcast I’d be really grateful if you could leave us a review on iTunes, or please share it and tell your friends.
The podcast is an Abarta Heritage production. Due to the ongoing COVID pandemic it was recorded over Zoom with Neil Jackman (the interviewer) Cathy Moore and Dr. Ben Gearey. We are really grateful to Cathy and Ben for their generosity and insights.
….’Our pioneers keep striking
Amplify Archaeology Podcast is also available on
Dig into more stories with Amplify Archaeology Podcast
Episode 21 with Terry O’Hagan
Archaeological Landscapes of St Patrick
Amplify Archaeology
Episode 14 with Maeve Sikora & Matthew Seaver
The National Museum of Ireland
Amplify Archaeology
Episode 12 with Dr. Damian Shiels
Conflict Archaeology
Amplify Archaeology
The post Wetland Archaeology – Amplify Archaeology Podcast – Episode 20 appeared first on Abarta Heritage Home.
218 Listeners
56 Listeners
3,193 Listeners
1,315 Listeners
54 Listeners
4,675 Listeners
230 Listeners
327 Listeners
1,775 Listeners
712 Listeners
134 Listeners
3,043 Listeners
80 Listeners
1,758 Listeners
1,982 Listeners