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

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Cork<br />

shape was not able to be inferred from these. In a few cases the amount <strong>of</strong> charcoal in the<br />

posthole and the blackening <strong>of</strong> the stones around it suggest that the building may have been<br />

destroyed by fire. A rock hollow was utilized as the base <strong>of</strong> one hearth (V). Its fill consisted <strong>of</strong><br />

powdered charcoal, bone fragments and some fragments <strong>of</strong> iron and slag. Though there was<br />

little depth <strong>of</strong> habitation material in this area, the scattered distribution <strong>of</strong> these features and<br />

the superimposition <strong>of</strong> hearths and postholes over each other were suggestive <strong>of</strong> various<br />

short successive habitation phases. A number <strong>of</strong> early artefacts including fragments <strong>of</strong> two<br />

bronze pins, a glass bead and an iron chain were recovered in this area in the centre <strong>of</strong> the<br />

site.<br />

Three dry-stone built souterrains were excavated in the interior <strong>of</strong> the site. It was suggested<br />

that the souterrains were ro<strong>of</strong>ed with timber supporting a covering <strong>of</strong> stone ro<strong>of</strong>ing tiles as<br />

no evidence for stone lintels were uncovered and evidence for a series <strong>of</strong> rock-cut postholes<br />

and recesses for wooden uprights was identified in Souterrain B. A large quantity <strong>of</strong> charcoal<br />

as well as fragments <strong>of</strong> thin shale was found in the fills <strong>of</strong> Souterrain A and B. It was<br />

suggested that the chambers in Souterrain C may not have been ro<strong>of</strong>ed and a large dump <strong>of</strong><br />

limpet shells in one <strong>of</strong> its chamber fills hints at its use as a refuse pit. A medieval iron axehead,<br />

three small fragments <strong>of</strong> a bronze plate and a large quantity <strong>of</strong> animal bone were also<br />

recovered within this structure. Though early medieval finds were recovered in the habitation<br />

evidence at the centre <strong>of</strong> the site and inside the souterrains, the absence <strong>of</strong> E ware pottery in<br />

both these contexts suggests that these structures were later in date than the black<br />

habitation deposit found immediately inside the palisade in the southwest quadrant.<br />

Nine crucible fragments and a large quantity <strong>of</strong> iron slag (13.6 kg), half from the early black<br />

organic deposit, were recovered from the site. Two large heavy pieces, one from beneath the<br />

black deposit and the other in the vicinity <strong>of</strong> a hearth in the centre <strong>of</strong> the site, were<br />

interpreted as furnace-bottoms and attest to the practice <strong>of</strong> iron smelting. Two quern<br />

fragments, a single spindle whorl, thirty pieces <strong>of</strong> flint and twenty whetstones were other<br />

finds recovered. A small quantity <strong>of</strong> un-burnt animal bone belonging to cattle and sheep (or<br />

goat) was recovered from the bottom <strong>of</strong> the palisade trench and in the lower layers <strong>of</strong> the<br />

souterrain fills.<br />

112

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