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AR01055_EMAP_Gazetteer_of_Sites_4-2_10.pdf - The Heritage ...

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Clare<br />

‘Glencurran Cave’ (Tullycommon td.), Co. Clare<br />

Grid Ref: R27409631 (12740/19631)<br />

SMR No: CL010-054<br />

Excavation Licence: 04E0432; 05E0379; 08E0265<br />

Excavation Duration/year: 12 weeks over 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009<br />

Site Director: M. Dowd (Institute <strong>of</strong> Technology Sligo)<br />

Glencurran Cave is situated on the southeastern side <strong>of</strong> Glencurran valley (110m 0D) in the<br />

western part <strong>of</strong> the Burren National Park, close to the villages <strong>of</strong> Kilnaboy and Carron.<br />

Excavations between 2004 and 2009 revealed evidence for Late Bronze Age votive deposition<br />

and early medieval occupation. <strong>The</strong> early medieval evidence was uncovered primarily from<br />

outside the cave entrance where some modification <strong>of</strong> the natural bedrock had taken place to<br />

create a D-shaped platform (Fig. 52). Here, a hearth and a collection <strong>of</strong> early medieval<br />

domestic artefacts were recovered. A Viking necklace was recovered deeper in the cave,<br />

approximately 50m from the entrance).<br />

<strong>The</strong> cave is over 750m in length, although only the outermost 65m is <strong>of</strong> archaeological<br />

interest. Inside the entrance is a level area named the ‘Entrance Chamber’, connected by a<br />

low narrow passage, less that 13m in length to the main cave passage.<br />

A Neolithic and early Bronze Age lithic assemblage- cores, blades, flakes, scrapers and<br />

retouched artefacts- were recovered from the entrance area as well as from deeper in the<br />

cave system. middle Bronze Age ritual activity was concentrated around a dry-stone-built<br />

cairn. Fragments <strong>of</strong> scallop shells, a shale axe, a rubbing stone, a copper-alloy object, a netsinker,<br />

bone beads, perforated cowrie shells, perforated an un-perforated periwinkle shells,<br />

amber beads and bead fragments, charcoal, animal bone and over 20 human bones were<br />

recovered from disturbed deposits on the cave floor directly beneath the cairn. A middle<br />

Bronze Age radiocarbon date was obtained from an adult human fibula (see below).<br />

Evidence for late Bronze Age votive deposition was also discovered in the cave, approximately<br />

45m from the entrance. An assemblage <strong>of</strong> disarticulated un-burnt human bones derived from<br />

at least seven individuals – adults and young children - was recovered. <strong>The</strong>se appeared to<br />

have formed token deposits together with a large quantity <strong>of</strong> cowrie shell beads, periwinkle<br />

shell beads, amber beads and the remains <strong>of</strong> three Late Bronze Age pottery vessels. Further<br />

evidence for deliberate deposition <strong>of</strong> disarticulated human bones was found at the cave<br />

entrance where a human bone produced a late Bronze Age/early Iron Age date (see below).<br />

Evidence for early medieval occupation was identified primarily in the entrance chamber and<br />

outside the cave entrance. <strong>The</strong> D-shaped platform outside the entrance appears to have been<br />

deliberately modified to produce a level surface for domestic activity. Several prehistoric<br />

lithics overlay the early medieval finds on the platform, suggesting that material was dug up<br />

from inside the cave and dumped outside to create this platform.<br />

<strong>The</strong> remains <strong>of</strong> a small crude stone-lined hearth were found immediately outside the entrance<br />

and contained a charcoal-rich deposit with burnt and un-burnt animal bones. Charcoal from<br />

the hearth came from a collection <strong>of</strong> twigs or small branches rather than mature wood. Along<br />

with the size <strong>of</strong> the hearth and the relatively low quantity <strong>of</strong> charcoal, this indicates a small<br />

low-intensity fire.<br />

A series <strong>of</strong> limestone blocks were fitted across the cave entrance and may have functioned as<br />

a plinth for a wooden door; a suggestion supported by the recovery <strong>of</strong> an iron barrel padlock<br />

key inside the cave. Another crude arrangement <strong>of</strong> stone was identified in the southern part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the entrance chamber and may mark an attempt at demarcating the living space between<br />

the chamber and the passage during this period.<br />

94

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