County: Wicklow Site name: TEMPLERAINEY
Sites and Monuments Record No.: N/A Licence number: 97E0083
Author: Breandán Ó Ríordáin, for Valerie J. Keeley Ltd.
Site type: Cremation pit
Period/Dating: Bronze Age (2200 BC-801 BC)
ITM: E 724837m, N 676670m
Latitude, Longitude (decimal degrees): 52.826520, -6.147554
Archaeological monitoring of topsoil-stripping on the route of the Arklow bypass in former tillage fields north of Arklow resulted in the discovery of three sites.
Site 1, N176223
A small area of dark charcoal-like material lay 0.23m below the original surface of the ground in sandy red-brown soil. No other material was associated with this deposit.
Site 2, N176155
This consisted of a deposit of charcoal associated with a scatter of cremated bone. It was in a layer of sandy brown and reddish-brown soil and appeared to have been partially protected by three relatively small field stones. The main deposit measured 0.5m north–south by 0.44m east–west and was a maximum of 0.2m deep. It was apparent that this material, which lay some 0.3m below the original ground surface, had suffered interference as a result of soil-stripping machines moving over the site, whereby some of the charcoal and cremated bone had been spread northwards over a distance of some 4.5m.
Site 3, N176075
This was initially identified as an area of light grey soil within which there were sherds of decorated pottery. The trowelling showed that there were three separate pits present, as well as a larger linear spread.
Pit A (diameter 0.9m, maximum depth 0.3m) contained a circular deposit of black clay and numerous sherds of pottery, charcoal and a fragment of bone. Six large stones were set around the north-eastern edge of the pit.
Pit B (0.9m north–south, 1m east–west, 0.35m deep) contained numerous sherds of pottery and charcoal and some flints.
Pit C (diameter 0.7m, depth 0.4m) contained sherds of pottery, charcoal and flint as well as fragments of burnt bone in the upper levels. At a lower level were found sherds of pottery and charcoal, but no flint fragments. Five large stones were set around the edge of this feature.
Pit D (diameter 0.48m, depth 0.2m) had a matrix of mid-brown/yellow redeposited sand containing two fragments of flint and occasional fragments of charcoal. A suggestion has been made that this may have been dug to hold a form of marker by which to locate the other three pits.
In excess of fifty sherds of pottery and over thirty flakes of flint, half of which were worked, were found in Pits A, B and C. Examination of the deposits in the pits suggests that there were two separate deposits in each. It was clear from the position of the pottery fragments that the vessels had been broken in antiquity; the potsherds are identifiable as being of Beaker and Food Vessel type. As there was no evidence to suggest the former presence of an associated earthwork, the site may be regarded as a flat cemetery.
Burgage More, Blessington, Co. Wicklow