Abstract

The historic Icelandic tephra layers, from Hekla in a.d. 1104 and Oraefajokull in a.d. 1362 that have been found in four peat profiles obtained from lowland and upland mid to western Irish bogs, provide the dating for high-resolution palynological investigations of regional land use over the last thousand years. Marginal agriculture is investigated through the study of an upland blanket peat and a lowland Atlantic blanket peat. At the lowland site, the landscape has been altered, primarily by removal of hazel scrub, while in the uplands, there has been little scrub woodland throughout the last millennium. Pastoral agriculture has a long, unbroken history at both sites, with a short period of arable agriculture, dated to the early 19th century, detected in the uplands. At the two lowland sites, changes in land use associated with medieval monastic and secular activity were similar but not synchronous. The a.d. 1362 tephra in one lowland profile provides high-resolution dating of the palynological evidence for agricultural collapse in the aftermath of the Black Death. The palynological evidence of late medieval woodland clearance is contrasted with the written record. The effects of 19th century population expansion on land use are considered. A synthesis of regional land use in Ireland during the last thousand years is presented.

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