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The magnificent Céide Fields in County Mayo


The Ceide Cliffs (on which the Ceide Fields rest) are over 300 million years old and rise up to 370 feet above sea level
The Ceide Cliffs (on which the Ceide Fields rest) are over 300 million years old and rise up to 370 feet above sea level

What first enabled the bog to grow in this region is debatable. Some believe that it was a change in climate or high amount of rainfall that eroded the soil's nutrients enabling the growth of bog-forming plants which require minimum sustenance and thrive in saturated conditions. Others feel it was the human impact on the forested environment that permitted the necessary conditions for the bog. It is likely that a combination of both climate and human intervention caused the optimal environment for the blanket bog to develop.

Although the origins of the bog are debated, it was certainly because of the bog that the Céide Fields became unsustainable. The fertility of the soil deteriorated, forcing the population to leave. It was a relatively slow decline, possibly occurring over centuries.
The lands around Ballycastle and to the east, along Killala Bay, were not affected by the rising bog, and it is likely that many of the Céide Fields' inhabitants relocated not far from the area.

Today, the Céide Fields is much more than an archaeological site. In 1989, Dr. Seamus Caulfield and Professor Martin Downes began the project for the Céide Fields Visitor Centre. The Office of Public Works (OPW) of Ireland designed the award-winning center and it was opened in 1993. Interestingly, the Mayo 5,000, celebrating the 5,000 years of the Céide Fields existence and the center's grand opening, featured a fledgling performer by the name of Michael Flatley. It was this festival that catapulted him into the spotlight and it was all because of the Céide Fields.

The center cuts an imposing outline rising as a pyramid from the landscape of the bog. The building is almost seamlessly built into the sensitive environment. According to the OPW, the building and all of its aspects are a "metaphor for the layers of history of man and the landscape in time, which is the subject matter of the exhibition."

The architects stipulated the use of natural durable materials for its construction. The interior of the building is composed of oak, sandstone and glass, with the materials becoming lighter in color as one approaches the glass-peaked observation tower. The center blends so well into its landscape that when approached from a distance the building is easily mistaken as another summit in the nearby island grouping, the Stags of Broadhaven.


Nster.com


7 Comments

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IT IS OF GREAT INTEREST TO THE WORLD....GREAT READ...MAYO
Me and mine have been to Ceide Fields several times and were enthralled. My people were forced out of Killala, Co. Mayo, not far from the site - because of An Gorta Mor and the oppressors. It is an experience that anyone of Irish background - and everyone else - should experience. It is not just the Fields but the spectacular views of the mighty sea that is incredible. And be sure to stop at the villiage of Killala - some great pubs with real craic (spelling?). P.S. Would somebody please correct my name: it is Scott McGowan!
I found this article to be very interesting. I had never heard of this site before reading about it here.
I'd love to see RTE get together with NOVA and produce a TV show/mini series on this. I'm with inishturk on wanting to see more of this kind of article here. Good work folks!!!
Excellent article -just sorry I'll be in Mayo too late in May to visit on this trip. This is the kind of content that interests me -Irish history, language and culture - in addition to news.
I'll be there in April!
This site is definitely on my list of places to visit on my next trip to Ireland.
 




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