Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland
Promontory forts are an understudied but distinctive maritime archaeological feature from the Iron Age to the early medieval period from northern Spain to Scotland. Their coastal location renders them susceptible to erosion and loss to history, a situation exacerbated by increased storm frequency an...
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doaj-696b343e00704afc9bbefc3fd20d420c2020-11-25T03:20:52ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-07-01125794579410.3390/su12145794Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, IrelandEdward Pollard0Anthony Corns1Sandra Henry2Robert Shaw3The Discovery Programme, Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland, 6 Mount Street Lower, 2 D02 T670 Dublin, IrelandThe Discovery Programme, Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland, 6 Mount Street Lower, 2 D02 T670 Dublin, IrelandThe Discovery Programme, Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland, 6 Mount Street Lower, 2 D02 T670 Dublin, IrelandThe Discovery Programme, Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland, 6 Mount Street Lower, 2 D02 T670 Dublin, IrelandPromontory forts are an understudied but distinctive maritime archaeological feature from the Iron Age to the early medieval period from northern Spain to Scotland. Their coastal location renders them susceptible to erosion and loss to history, a situation exacerbated by increased storm frequency and sea level rise. Reconstruction of their original form is important to determine their role in the society of the time. This paper concentrates on a particularly notable group of promontory forts along the Copper Coast of Co. Waterford, where traces of up to 32 remain today within a 24 km stretch of coastline. The methodology has involved using oral tradition, historical records and field survey. This has been enhanced by aerial survey using drones and light aircraft. This paper models the data to estimate areas eroded and show how forts were once significantly larger and dominated coastal resources with an economy of farming, fishing, mining and trading. This paper calculates a likely erosion rate of 4–5 cm/yr and anticipates the last remains to be lost in 350 years, perhaps sooner with climate change.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/14/5794climate changeoral traditionmedieval coastlineaerial archaeologyminingCeltic Sea |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Edward Pollard Anthony Corns Sandra Henry Robert Shaw |
spellingShingle |
Edward Pollard Anthony Corns Sandra Henry Robert Shaw Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland Sustainability climate change oral tradition medieval coastline aerial archaeology mining Celtic Sea |
author_facet |
Edward Pollard Anthony Corns Sandra Henry Robert Shaw |
author_sort |
Edward Pollard |
title |
Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland |
title_short |
Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland |
title_full |
Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland |
title_fullStr |
Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland |
title_full_unstemmed |
Coastal Erosion and the Promontory Fort: Appearance and Use during Late Iron Age and Early Medieval County Waterford, Ireland |
title_sort |
coastal erosion and the promontory fort: appearance and use during late iron age and early medieval county waterford, ireland |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Sustainability |
issn |
2071-1050 |
publishDate |
2020-07-01 |
description |
Promontory forts are an understudied but distinctive maritime archaeological feature from the Iron Age to the early medieval period from northern Spain to Scotland. Their coastal location renders them susceptible to erosion and loss to history, a situation exacerbated by increased storm frequency and sea level rise. Reconstruction of their original form is important to determine their role in the society of the time. This paper concentrates on a particularly notable group of promontory forts along the Copper Coast of Co. Waterford, where traces of up to 32 remain today within a 24 km stretch of coastline. The methodology has involved using oral tradition, historical records and field survey. This has been enhanced by aerial survey using drones and light aircraft. This paper models the data to estimate areas eroded and show how forts were once significantly larger and dominated coastal resources with an economy of farming, fishing, mining and trading. This paper calculates a likely erosion rate of 4–5 cm/yr and anticipates the last remains to be lost in 350 years, perhaps sooner with climate change. |
topic |
climate change oral tradition medieval coastline aerial archaeology mining Celtic Sea |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/14/5794 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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