A multiproxy study of Ballywillin Crannog, Lough Kinale, central Ireland is presented. The methodology used reveals the wealth of information that a multiproxy approach can contribute in lake settlement studies. Plant macrofossils, pollen and spores, diatoms, chironomids and Coleoptera from a lake core are used to reconstruct local and regional vegetation change and lake history to establish the age and function of the crannog. The palaeoecological evidence suggests that Ballywillin Crannog was constructed around AD 620, with its most intensive period of occupation after AD 1150. Cereals and a range of gathered fruits and nuts were brought onto and cooked on the crannog, and cereal grains were possibly stored there
In early medieval Ireland, people built and lived on small islets o f stone, earth and wood situated...
Palaeoecological methods can provide an environmental context for archaeological sites, enabling the...
In early medieval Ireland, people built and lived on small islets o f stone, earth and wood situate...
A multiproxy study of Ballywillin Crannog, Lough Kinale, central Ireland is presented. The methodolo...
Crannogs are widely distributed archaeological sites in Scotland and Ireland and can be described as...
Stratigraphical investigations, geomorphological mapping, and diatom, plant macro-fossil and pollen ...
Crannogs are widely distributed archaeological sites in Scotland and Ireland and can be described as...
Stratigraphical investigations, geomorphological mapping, and diatom, plant macrofossil and pollen a...
Three cores from two connected lakes in Central Ireland (Lough Kinale and Derragh Lough) were invest...
The aim of this thesis is to understand the nature of changing human-environment interactions throug...
This project is based on a paleolimnological investigation at Lough Muckno, a large lake system loca...
A high-resolution pollen record for the Holocene has been obtained from Derragh Bog, a small raised ...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions – visible yet inaccessible, wid...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions—visible yet inaccessible, wides...
Turloughs are karst wetland ecosystems that are virtually unique to Ireland. They are intermittently...
In early medieval Ireland, people built and lived on small islets o f stone, earth and wood situated...
Palaeoecological methods can provide an environmental context for archaeological sites, enabling the...
In early medieval Ireland, people built and lived on small islets o f stone, earth and wood situate...
A multiproxy study of Ballywillin Crannog, Lough Kinale, central Ireland is presented. The methodolo...
Crannogs are widely distributed archaeological sites in Scotland and Ireland and can be described as...
Stratigraphical investigations, geomorphological mapping, and diatom, plant macro-fossil and pollen ...
Crannogs are widely distributed archaeological sites in Scotland and Ireland and can be described as...
Stratigraphical investigations, geomorphological mapping, and diatom, plant macrofossil and pollen a...
Three cores from two connected lakes in Central Ireland (Lough Kinale and Derragh Lough) were invest...
The aim of this thesis is to understand the nature of changing human-environment interactions throug...
This project is based on a paleolimnological investigation at Lough Muckno, a large lake system loca...
A high-resolution pollen record for the Holocene has been obtained from Derragh Bog, a small raised ...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions – visible yet inaccessible, wid...
Lake settlements, particularly crannogs, pose several contradictions—visible yet inaccessible, wides...
Turloughs are karst wetland ecosystems that are virtually unique to Ireland. They are intermittently...
In early medieval Ireland, people built and lived on small islets o f stone, earth and wood situated...
Palaeoecological methods can provide an environmental context for archaeological sites, enabling the...
In early medieval Ireland, people built and lived on small islets o f stone, earth and wood situate...