2002:1157 - CURRAHEEN SOUTH, Limerick

NMI Burial Excavation Records

County: Limerick Site name: CURRAHEEN SOUTH

Sites and Monuments Record No.: N/A Licence number: 02E0811

Author: Brian Halpin, for Margaret Gowen & Co. Ltd.

Site type: Pit and Burial

Period/Dating: Multi-period

ITM: E 538855m, N 644409m

Latitude, Longitude (decimal degrees): 52.547583, -8.901516

Topsoil-stripping on the Bord Gáis Éireann Pipeline to the West uncovered a series of pits and cut features in Curraheen South townland, Co. Limerick. The largest pit measured 3m by 0.8m, with a maximum depth of 0.33m. It contained three fills, all of which had minor amounts of charcoal and decayed stone. The pits had irregular cuts but were generally U-shaped, with gradually sloping sides to a flat base that reached the water table. They were post-medieval refuse pits and contained much post-medieval/ modern porcelain, animal bone and two horseshoes. Local knowledge of the field indicates that the site was abandoned after the Famine.

At a distance of 8.5m north of the main site, a disarticulated human skeleton of post-medieval/modern date was found, partially exposed. Although most of the skull was not present, the remainder of the skeleton was recovered fairly intact, with the bones, though brittle, in a good state of preservation. The skeleton was found in a crouched position, roughly on its left side, with the right arm extended behind the spine, exposing the ribcage vertically. The grave-cut, oriented north–south, measured c. 1.12m and was extremely shallow, lying just under the topsoil, and no remnants of a coffin or shroud were noted. The orientation of the grave and its shallow cut indicate very quick deposition of the corpse. The skeleton appears, on preliminary inspection, to have been that of a late adolescent. The post-medieval date of the associated features, in association with the local knowledge of this site, may indicate that this was the grave of a Famine victim. No grave-goods were noted, nor were other skeletal remains found on the site.

The immediate landscape appears to be an abandoned agricultural settlement of post-medieval/modern date.

2 Killiney View, Albert Road Lower, Glenageary, Co. Dublin