Ireland Dig Reveals Multiple Burials

News August 29, 2018

SHARE:

DUNGARVAN, IRELAND—According to a report in the Irish Sun, volunteer archaeologists in County Waterford have uncovered human remains, including fragments of a skull, jaw, and teeth, which may date to between 300 and 400 years ago. The discovery was made during excavations at Gallow's Hill, a large mound in Dungarvan that was once the site of a twelfth-century Norman castle. Researchers believe that one of the burials likely dates to a period of warfare in the seventeenth-century—perhaps the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland or later Jacobite uprisings. Another interment may date to the period that gave the site its name, when it was used as a location for executions by hanging. To read more about the archaeology of Ireland, go to "The Vikings in Ireland.

  • Features July/August 2018

    The City at the Beginning of the World

    The only Maya city with an urban grid may embody a creation myth

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Timothy Pugh/Itza Archaeological Project)
  • Letter from England July/August 2018

    Inside the Anarchy

    Archaeologists explore the landscape of England’s first civil war

    Read Article
    (Kate Ravilious)
  • Artifacts July/August 2018

    Roman Boxing Gloves

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Vindolanda Trust)
  • Digs & Discoveries July/August 2018

    Sun Storm

    Read Article
    (Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images)