Poulnabrone dolmen (Irish: Poll na Brón, lit. 'Hole of the Quernstone'[2]) is a large dolmen (or cromlech,[3] a type of single-chamber portal tomb) located in the Burren, County Clare, Ireland. Situated on one of the region's most desolate and highest points, it comprises three standing portal stones supporting a heavy horizontal capstone and dates to the early Neolithic period, with estimates from 4200 BC to 2900 BC. Although not the largest, it is the best known of the approximately 172 dolmens in Ireland.
It was constructed on a unique karst landscape formed from limestone laid down around 350 million years ago. The dolmen was built by Neolithic farmers, who chose the location either for ritual, as a territorial marker, or as a collective burial site. What remains today is only the "stone skeleton" of the original monument; originally, it would have been covered with soil, and its flagstone capped by a cairn.
When the site was excavated in 1986 and again in 1988, around 33 human remains, including those of adults and children (including the remains of a much later Bronze Age infant) were found buried underneath it. Also discovered were various stone and bone objects that would have been placed with the dead at the time of interment. The human remains and objects are estimated to have been buried intermittently during the 600-year period between 3800 and 3200 BC.[4]
Name
Poulnabrone is an English phonetic transcription of the Irish Poll na Brón. Brón is the genitive case of the Irish word bró, meaning quern, so the name means "Hole (or Pool) of the Quernstone". It is sometimes translated as "Hole of Sorrows" (Poll na mBrón).[5]
Origin and purpose
Poulnabrone dolmen is located on a low circular mound measuring c. 10 m (33 ft) in diameter. The site is east of the Poulanine and Glensleade valleys, beyond which are the rocky Baur and Poulnabrucky hills. From about 54 m (177 ft) north-east of the site the land rises into rough and uneven rocky terraces.[6] The location would have been difficult of access at the time it was built, and it was probably used as a center for ritual into the Bronze Age.[citation needed][7]
The monument may have also served as a territorial marker in the Neolithic landscape, in a position visible from all around and close to the important north-south route from Ballyvaughan Bay south to the region where Kilnaboy village now stands.[8] It is possible that the local settlers erected the dolmen to delimit the northern border of their territory,[9] and later used for burials for successive generations.
Unusually for an Irish dolmen, but typical of those found in County Clare, the capstone slopes upward towards the west.[3]
Description
Poulnabrone dolmen consists of a slab-like tabular capstone (or table-stone) supported by two pillar stones on either side which create a chamber that tapers eastwards. Two portal stones at its lower end mark the tomb's entrance.[6]
The trapezoidal capstone is 3.9 m (13 ft) in length, between 2 m (6 ft 7 in) (min) and 3 m (9.8 ft) (max) wide, and is 0.3 m (1 ft 0 in) thick.[6] It is supported by two pairs of stones on the north and south sides; a number of others have fallen over the millennia. The capstone and north and south pillars form a chamber which is 2.8 m (9 ft 2 in) long, and tapers eastwards due to the relative height of the supporting stones.[3] These side stones are fixed directly on the limestone bedrock, and thus would have been no higher during the Neolithic period.[10]
The portal stones are positioned at either side of the lower side of the capstone, marking the tomb's entrance. A threshold stone (or sill) stone lies transverse on an east-west crevice in front of them.[6]
The cairn extends an average of 3 m (9.8 ft) from the chamber.[11]
A crack at the base of the eastern portal stone was noticed during a survey in the 1950s.[13] By the early 1980s it had grown[11] to the extent that it was thought likely to destabilise the tomb. Two phases of conservation were undertaken in 1986 and 1988, and were overseen by Ann Lynch, Senior Archaeologist at the National Monuments Service.[14]
At the time of the first excavation, the dolmen was on private land. In order for it to be carried out, it was taken into the guardianship of the Irish state in 1986.[13] The 1986 excavation focused on the chamber and cairn.[15] The priority was to raise the capstone so as to relieve pressure on the damaged portal. This was achieved by the constructing of a pyramidal wooden scaffolding which protected the archaeologists working underneath the capstone, and gave leverage to raise the capstone enough so that they could work on the portal stone and fully excavate the chamber.[13]
During the excavations, the remains of around 33 people were found buried within the chamber.[16] In addition, items such as pottery, a stone axe, jewelry made from bone and quartzcrystals, and weapons were found buried found in various locations.[8][17]
Human remains
The human remains were analysed by Dr Barra O'Donnabhain (University College Cork) and Dr Mara Tesorieri and from a total of some 6,000 bone fragments,[18] the remains of a minimum of 28, but more likely around 36 people, were found buried within the monument.[19][20] Although it was usually difficult—or impossible—to distinguish the remains of each individual, Lynch estimates that at least 17 were adolescent or younger, while there was roughly an equal amount of males and females.[21] 4,169 bones are identifiable to specific human bone types, while a further 486 are loose teeth. All but one of the identified adults were under the age of 30. They lived between 3800 and 3200 BC, and can be assumed to have been members of successive generations of a Neolithic specific community.[22]
In most cases, the pathology and physical condition of the remains indicated lives spent in hard physical labour, and a life span that ended before the age of 30. Only one individual seems to have survived the past 40 years.[citation needed] Wear on the chest and chest vertebra of some individuals indicates the carrying of heavy loads on the head and back.[20] Many of the bones showed signs of arthritis in the upper body, and the children's teeth showed evidence of illness and malnutrition.[22] Dental pathology, including the wearing of the upper front teeth, indicates that they had a relatively abrasive and mostly plant-based diet, with limited consumption of animal protein.[20]
The remains of two of the bodies contain signs of violent injuries. The left parietal lobe of a young or middle-adult male's skull contains an oval depressed lesion sustained from the impact of a small blunt object. Because of the position of the wound towards the top of the head, it is more likely the result of a projectile rather than a fall, possibly from a sling shot. The wound seems to have fully healed with no signs of infection.[23] The right hip bone of another individual contains the tip of a triangular stone projectile, which seems to have been shot from behind. Although the wound itself would not have been fatal because it did not heal, it is assumed that the person incurred other fatal injuries during the same incident.[24]
The remains of a sixth-month old baby with Down Syndrome were found at the megalith. This is thought to be the earliest discovered case of Down Syndrome. There was evidence that the infant had been breastfed prior to their death.[25]
Some bodies had been left elsewhere to decompose—likely in a protected location, as none show any signs of animal teeth marks. As some show scorch marks, they may have been ritually burned beforehand.[26]
Sometime between c. 1750 and 1420 BC (corresponding with the Irish Bronze Age), an infant was buried just outside the entrance.[9]
Pottery and artifacts
Most of the pottery was discovered within the main chamber, with smaller finds in the portico and cairn. All of the pieces are badly disintegrated and very small; according to archaeologist Anne Brindley, they consist of "crumbs or fragments",[27] and it is not possible to determine how may original objects they come from.[28] Although few of the remnants have distinguishing characteristics, some of the pottery fragments have been identified as within the early Western Neolithic tradition (c. 3750–3600 BC), largely based on the type of paste, and a few pieces with partially intact rims or decorations.[28]
Tourism and preservation
The site is relatively unblemished, despite being a popular tourist attraction.
A large car park was opened in 2007 by the Clare County Council to deal with traffic problems caused by cars or coaches parking on the narrow road, guided by a 2005 estimate that put the number of annual visitors at 200,000.[29] In 2007, tension arose when Lynch requested that visitor facilities should be reduced to preserve "the spiritual quality of the landscape surrounding the tomb."[30]
Brindley, Anna. The Prehistoric Pottery. In: Lynch, Ann, "Poulnabrone: An Early Neolithic Portal Dolmen in Ireland". Dublin: Archaeological Monograph Series 9, 2014
Carthy, Hugh. Burren Archaeology. Cork: The Collins Press, 2011. ISBN978-1-8488-9105-0
Grant, Christine. "Heritage Guide No. 49: The Burren in prehistory". Archaeology Ireland, June 2010. JSTOR40661509
Jones, Carleton. "The Burren and the Aran Islands - Exploring the Archaeology". Cork: Collins Press, 2004. ISBN978-1-9034-6449-6
Kador, Thomas; Fibiger, Linda; Cooney, Gabriel; Fullagar, Paul. "Movement and diet in early Irish prehistory: first evidence from multi-isotope analysis". Journal of Irish Archaeology, volume 23, 2014. JSTORjirisarch.23.83
Lynch, Ann. Poulnabrone: An Early Neolithic Portal Tomb in Ireland. Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2014. ISBN978-1-4064-2817-9
Lynch, Ann. "Poulnabrone: A Stone in Time". Archaeology Ireland, Volume 2, No. 3, 1988. JSTOR20561956
Murphy, Eileen. "Funerary Processing of the Dead in Prehistoric Ireland". Archaeology Ireland, volume 17, No. 2, Summer, 2003. JSTOR20562666
O’Donnabhain, B. and M. Tesorieri. 2014 The Human Remains. In Lynch, A. Poulnabrone: An Early Neolithic Portal Tomb in Ireland, pp 61-86. Government Publications, Dublin.
Sheridan, Alison. "Reviewed Work: 'Poulnabrone: An Early Neolithic Portal Tomb in Ireland' by Ann Lynch". Ulster Journal of Archaeology, Third Series, volume 75, 2019–20. JSTOR27012925
Weir, Anthony. Early Ireland: A Field Guide. Belfast: Blackstaff Press, 1980. ISBN978-0-8564-0212-8
External links
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