Burnt mounds, or fulachtaí fiadh as they are known in Ireland, are probably the most common prehistoric site type in Ireland and Britain. Typically Middle–Late Bronze Age in age (although both earlier and later examples are known), they are artefact-poor and rarely associated with settlements. The function of these sites has been much debated with the most commonly cited uses being for cooking, as steam baths or saunas, for brewing, tanning, or textile processing. A number of major infrastructural development schemes in Ireland in the years 2002–2007 revealed remarkable numbers of these mounds often associated with wood-lined troughs, many of which were extremely well-preserved. This afforded an opportunity to investigate them as landscape ...
The deforestation of upland areas in southwest Britain during the mid-Holocene has become an archaeo...
Palaeoecological methods can provide an environmental context for archaeological sites, enabling the...
Long-term environmental change and human impact have been reconstructed at fi ne spatial and tempora...
Burnt mounds, or fulachtaí fiadh as they are known in Ireland, are probably the most common prehisto...
It is apparent from the widespread distribution of burnt mounds that Ireland was the most prolific u...
Funded by Road services Northern Ireland, Jacobs and Headland ArchaeologyPeer reviewedPostprin
This thesis aims at investigating whether archaeobotanical investigations, combined with geochemical...
The authors acknowledge funding from The Leverhulme Trust (F/00144/AI) and assistance from a large n...
Burnt mounds, accumulations of fire-cracked stone and fuel residues dating largely from the Bronze ...
motorway construction, at the edge of a small mire in Kilbegly Townland, County Roscommon, provided ...
In 2003, the remains of an Early Iron Age bog body, known as ‘Oldcroghan Man’, were recovered during...
<p>Charred plant remains from samples taken from an excavation at Fermoy, Co. Cork, Ireland. Site co...
This thesis concerns the palaeohydrological reconstruction of a raised mire in Kilnagamagh, Co. Offa...
The main aim of this thesis was to explore wood resource use, its impact on local woodland and the f...
This thesis assesses the environmental marginality of a site at the Atlantic fringe of the British I...
The deforestation of upland areas in southwest Britain during the mid-Holocene has become an archaeo...
Palaeoecological methods can provide an environmental context for archaeological sites, enabling the...
Long-term environmental change and human impact have been reconstructed at fi ne spatial and tempora...
Burnt mounds, or fulachtaí fiadh as they are known in Ireland, are probably the most common prehisto...
It is apparent from the widespread distribution of burnt mounds that Ireland was the most prolific u...
Funded by Road services Northern Ireland, Jacobs and Headland ArchaeologyPeer reviewedPostprin
This thesis aims at investigating whether archaeobotanical investigations, combined with geochemical...
The authors acknowledge funding from The Leverhulme Trust (F/00144/AI) and assistance from a large n...
Burnt mounds, accumulations of fire-cracked stone and fuel residues dating largely from the Bronze ...
motorway construction, at the edge of a small mire in Kilbegly Townland, County Roscommon, provided ...
In 2003, the remains of an Early Iron Age bog body, known as ‘Oldcroghan Man’, were recovered during...
<p>Charred plant remains from samples taken from an excavation at Fermoy, Co. Cork, Ireland. Site co...
This thesis concerns the palaeohydrological reconstruction of a raised mire in Kilnagamagh, Co. Offa...
The main aim of this thesis was to explore wood resource use, its impact on local woodland and the f...
This thesis assesses the environmental marginality of a site at the Atlantic fringe of the British I...
The deforestation of upland areas in southwest Britain during the mid-Holocene has become an archaeo...
Palaeoecological methods can provide an environmental context for archaeological sites, enabling the...
Long-term environmental change and human impact have been reconstructed at fi ne spatial and tempora...