Milestone – Earthsound survey all 26 Counties!

Following the completion of last weeks survey on the Black Pigs Dyke, Co. Monaghan, Earthsound have now reached a milestone: we’ve carried out a geophysical survey in every county in Ireland – it has taken 12 years but we got there! Our survey in Co. Monaghan (statistically the county with the least amount of planning applications and research projects) was the last one we needed for our collection!

If anyone wants some surveys done in Co. Tyrone in Northern Ireland, let us know – then we’ll have the full set of 32, north and south. After that, we’ll go for every offshore island – not that many are there?

© 2014 Earthsound Geophysics Ltd.

Black Pig’s Dyke, Co. Monaghan

Project: Black Pig’s Dyke Research Project, Co. Monaghan.

Location: Corrinary, Co. Monaghan.

Year: 2014

Client: Kilkenny Archaeology

Funding: Monaghan County Council

Electromagnetic Data showing the ‘Black Pig’s Dyke’

Aim: The Black Pig’s Dyke constitutes a series of earthwork fortifications located along the border of Northeast Connacht, Southwest Ulster and a small portion of Northwest Leinster throughout the counties of Cavan, Fermanagh, Leitrim, Longford, Monaghan and Roscommon with some possible links to earthworks in Counties Armagh, Donegal and Down. The earthworks comprise a series of banks and ditches with the banks being on average 9 metres wide and the ditches being on average 6 metres in depth, and having at one point contained a substantial palisade structure.The earthworks are considered to have an Iron Age provenance and were theorised by antiquarians to comprise an ancient boundary wall demarking the area of Ulster from the south, in particular as a defence against cattle raids.

Earthsound were commissioned by Kilkenny Archaeology as part of their involvement in the larger Black Pig’s Dyke Research Project, to investigate a portion of the Dyke located within the townland of Corrinary in County Monaghan, near the Cavan border. An Electromagnetic survey was executed across the site and two ditches (a substantial one to the north and a smaller one to the south) were discovered along with evidence for a possible burnt palisade.

Outcome: The geophysical surveys undertaken for this project have successfully identified the exact location and composition of the Black Pig’s Dyke within the survey area. Confirmation has been gained for the presence of two ditches, one on the internal (southern) edge of the dyke and a more extensive one on the external (northern) edge. Additional features included a possible palisade and ditch.