1977:071 - ARDCRONY, Tipperary

NMI Burial Excavation Records

County: Tipperary Site name: ARDCRONY

Sites and Monuments Record No.: N/A Licence number:

Author: P. Wallace, National Museum of Ireland

Site type: Linkardstown burial

Period/Dating: Neolithic (4000BC-2501 BC)

ITM: E 587953m, N 687337m

Latitude, Longitude (decimal degrees): 52.936705, -8.179209

A massive central cist of sub-megalithic proportions was uncovered at the centre of a denuded cairn which originally measured about 33m in diameter of which about 20m remains. About 2.5m of the cairn height survives, The cist was polygonal in plan and consisted of a single large stone inclining at about 60 degrees at each side and of two vertical boulders at each end. The floor was paved with small irregularly-shaped flat stones and measured 1.75m by 1.4m. The cist was 69cm high (internally) and 1.48m by 93cm at the mouth. It was covered by a large single capstone, 1.9m long by 1.73m wide by 51cm in max. thickness.
Two disarticulated and unburnt skeletons, identified by Prof. C.A. Erskine as being of men of 17 and 45 years, lay on tile paved floor, one on either side of a shouldered, round-bottomed, highly decorated shallow bowl of late Neolithic date, the bones had been disturbed before investigation. The bowl was covered with channelled decoration comprised of pendant triangles of horizontal lines and dots as well as circumferential lines around the rim and shoulder, the ornament on the base being arranged on a quadripartite system.
The cist and cairn fit into the Linkardstown group while the bowl and mode of burial make this the most western example, so far, of the ‘South Leinster” Single Burial tradition of the late Neolithic. A full excavation of the structure will explore the nature of the cairn, the existence of kerbs, and the relationship of cairn, and a now removed earthen ring, to the cist.
Wallace, P. (1977) N. Munster Archaeol. J., 19, 3-20.