List of submerged places in the Republic of Ireland

This is a list of submerged places in Ireland. Sometimes, entire villages are submerged under the waters of a reservoir. When the level of waters is low, the structures can emerge and be visible.

Submerged villages and municipalities edit

A large area of countryside, about 5,000 acres (20 km2), was evacuated to create the Poulaphouca Reservoir in the 1930s and 1940s, including the village of Poulaphouca.[1] 76 houses were also destroyed.[2]

Submerged landmarks edit

An ancient forest stood in the area between Bray, County Wicklow and Killiney before being submerged by rising sea levels c. 4000 BC. Under the Irish Sea is a "prehistoric palaeolandscape of plains, hills, marshlands and river valleys, in which evidence of human activity is expected to be preserved"; it has been compared to Doggerland in the North Sea.[3]

Lough Nahaltora. County Mayo, contains a submerged forest from c. 2000 BC.[4]

Rosslare Fort was submerged by a storm in 1924–25; a fort had stood on the promontory in Wexford Harbour since the 17th century.[2]

Other submerged sites, according to the National Monuments Service, include "landscapes, harbours, jetties, landing places, fish traps, kelp grids, bridge sites, crannogs and tidal mills."[5]

Moved landmarks edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Many families who lived at Poulaphouca Reservoir moved to Kildare". www.leinsterleader.ie.
  2. ^ a b "The Sunken Towns of Ireland". 14 January 2004.
  3. ^ O'Brien, Tim. "Undersea hunt begins for 'lost landscapes' off Irish coast". The Irish Times.
  4. ^ Sites (www.communitysites.co.uk), Community. "Srahwee Wedge Tomb and Submerged Forest - Places - Louisburgh-Killeen Heritage". www.louisburgh-killeenheritage.org.
  5. ^ "Underwater Archaeology - National Monuments Service". www.archaeology.ie.
  6. ^ Montgomery, Bob. "Haunting tales of submerged villages and steam trams in the Ghost's Hole". The Irish Times.
  7. ^ "Demolition of St. Lua's Church, Killaloe, Co. Clare, Ireland · Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland".
  8. ^ "Transportation of St. Lua's Church, Killaloe, Co. Clare, Ireland · Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland".