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Aerial Archaeology in Ireland - The Heritage Council

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Figure 51: A r<strong>in</strong>gfort at Cush, Co. Limerick, show<strong>in</strong>g heavy<br />

encroachment of scrub (Department of the Environment,<br />

<strong>Heritage</strong> and Local Government)<br />

Despite its possible shortcom<strong>in</strong>gs, the AFAR study did highlight concerns about the rapid rate of decay of rural archaeology <strong>in</strong><br />

<strong>Ireland</strong>. Even if its detailed results can be questioned, the need to address the issues raised has, if anyth<strong>in</strong>g, been re<strong>in</strong>forced by<br />

subsequent surveys by NMS. Other studies (Barrett 1997b, 1997/8; Dunford 2002, 2003; ERA-Maptec et al. 2005) have begun to<br />

highlight different aspects of pressures on historic landscape character.<br />

Taken together with broader trends <strong>in</strong> the economics of farm<strong>in</strong>g (ICSTI 1999), these issues suggest that significantly more<br />

attention needs to be paid to the conservation of the rural historic environment. This need is all the greater now, as current<br />

problems with the economic viability of farm<strong>in</strong>g mean that there is <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g pressure to <strong>in</strong>tensify production <strong>in</strong> the more<br />

productive areas, while at the same time precipitat<strong>in</strong>g a withdrawal from farm<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> less productive areas, with the subsequent<br />

development of unmanaged scrub vegetation on monuments. As noted above (Figure 37), this effect is already discernible <strong>in</strong> the<br />

Burren (Dunford 2002, 2003; ERA-Maptec et al. 2005).<br />

<strong>Aerial</strong> archaeology has very clear potential to play an0 important, and probably very cost-effective, role both <strong>in</strong> enhanc<strong>in</strong>g<br />

understand<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong> monitor<strong>in</strong>g these trends and their effects on the historic environment (Figure 52). But its use for these<br />

purposes is <strong>in</strong>sufficiently developed.<br />

a b c<br />

Figures 52 a-c: Successive air photographs of Glanfahan, Co. Kerry by (a) St Joseph (1964), (b) Gillian Barrett (1990), and (c) Markus Casey (c.2000) show<br />

the impact of modern clearance and land improvement on well-preserved ancient countryside (the latest image shows there has been little change<br />

s<strong>in</strong>ce 1990)<br />

95

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