Edward Pollard
@edwardpollard.bsky.social
📤 142
📥 203
📝 12
Coastal and Maritime Archaeologist
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
27 days ago
Thank you everyone who joined our
#HeritageWeek
Coastal Archaeology walk this weekend despite the wet weather! We had a great time exchanging knowledge about this stretch of coast This was grant-aided by
@ria.ie
, funded by
@nationalmons.bsky.social
.
@heritagecouncil.ie
@edwardpollard.bsky.social
0
5
2
Hut site and cairns in the eroding sand dunes on the Doorin Point survey.
@cormacduffy.bsky.social
@ria.ie
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
This project is grant aided by
#RIAgrants
funded by
@nationalmons.bsky.social
about 1 month ago
0
9
2
Eroding shell middens recorded surveying around Doorin Point, Donegal.
@cormacduffy.bsky.social
@ria.ie
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
This project is grant aided by
#RIAgrants
funded by
@nationalmons.bsky.social
about 1 month ago
0
10
2
Erosion cut through a stream making a new waterfall with the original now dry valley on the townland boundary seen further south. Doorin Point in Donegal
@cormacduffy.bsky.social
This project is grant aided by
#RIAgrants
funded by
@nationalmons.bsky.social
@ria.ie
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
about 1 month ago
0
5
2
Traces of a cart track running along the intertidal zone was recorded on the Doorin Point survey, Donegal
@cormacduffy.bsky.social
This project is grant aided by
#Riagrants
@ria.ie
funded by
@nationalmons.bsky.social
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
about 1 month ago
0
8
2
Checking out the erratics used as land marks, place names, fossils and rock formations on the foreshore around Doorin Point promontory fort in Donegal
@cormacduffy.bsky.social
#Riagrants
@ria.ie
@nationalmons.bsky.social
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
about 1 month ago
0
6
2
Good start finding submerged forests and old landing places. Looking forward to going around the promontory fort on Doorin Point when continue in a couple of weeks
#RIAgrants
@ria.ie
@nationalmons.bsky.social
add a skeleton here at some point
about 2 months ago
0
4
1
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
2 months ago
For those who caught the
@rteone.rte.ie
coverage of our work on eroding archaeology on the Copper Coast & would like to know more, check out this tour of Illaunobrick Promontory Fort from our Maritime Archaeologist Dr @edwardpollard.bsky.social:
youtu.be/34KhLwKwTHc?...
@heritagecouncil.ie
loading . . .
Tour of Illaunobrick Iron Age Promontory Fort
YouTube video by The Discovery Programme
https://youtu.be/34KhLwKwTHc?si=TWAPOdrQJ2bXtNhz
1
3
2
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
2 months ago
Whilst in Co. Galway last week,
@edwardpollard.bsky.social
&
@hannahboyd.bsky.social
undertook Coastal Zone Assessment on the Maree Peninsula. We walked the coastline, identifying & recording features relating to the maritime heritage of an area
@heritagecouncil.ie
@nationalmons.bsky.social
0
3
1
reposted by
Edward Pollard
Neil Jackman
2 months ago
Climate impact on archaeology now on RTÉ Radio 1 🚨
1
5
1
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
2 months ago
This week, Discovery Programme staff Susan, Ted and Hannah are onsite at Dr Michelle Comber’s excavations at Rathgurreen, Co. Galway, part of the Maree Project. The team are looking forward to a week of digging, despite yesterday's rain!
@heritagecouncil.ie
@uniofgalway.bsky.social
0
5
2
My talk on Clonmines from last week is available now in the first session of the Irish historic town atlas seminar
www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWGr...
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
loading . . .
IHTA Seminar 2025 Session I Urban perspectives: from source to sea I
YouTube video by Royal Irish Academy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWGrPDCVX4E&list=PLD_4i6suzwGV_KPcK0kmjD1CmXp5nv2Bk&index=1
4 months ago
0
5
1
Pleased for having opportunity to talk on the ruins of Clonmines in Co. Wexford yesterday at the Royal Irish Academy seminar on Water, towns and topography. Glad to be able to discuss silting, erosion and traversing the estuary
#CHERISHlegacy
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
@heritagecouncil.ie
4 months ago
0
3
1
reposted by
Edward Pollard
National Museum of Ireland
6 months ago
In the mid-9th century, amidst fierce Viking raids, scribes in northeast Ireland copied a Latin textbook written in 6th-century Constantinople, this manuscript, is key to understanding the Irish language of the time.
#NMIBlog
#MuseumBlog
#CuratorBlog
#Archaeology
www.museum.ie/en-IE/Collec...
1
141
49
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
6 months ago
Happy St Patrick’s Day from the Discovery Programme! St Patrick’s Bridge in Co. Wexford is a submerged causeway leading to the Saltee Islands. The area was studied in the CHERISH Project due to coastal erosion
#CHERISHlegacy
@nationalmons.bsky.social
@heritagecouncil.ie
@drtobydriver.bsky.social
0
9
3
reposted by
Edward Pollard
National Museum of Ireland
7 months ago
‘Songs of the Sea’, what are they? Do you have knowledge of a song, in either Irish or English, that is related to life along Ireland’s Atlantic coast? If you do and you would like to share your story, we would love to hear from you.
#MaritimeHistory
www.ouririshheritage.org/content/arch...
0
40
25
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
7 months ago
Happy Valentine’s Day! 💘 Holed stones in the landscape are prehistoric in origin, but over time became associated with oath-taking, used by lovers for making promises or getting engaged. We found these holed stones during CHERISH project fieldwork, perhaps used for this purpose
#cherishlegacy
0
7
3
Glad to talk on Rosslare Fort today in Belfast at the Irish Post Medieval Archaeology Group conference. It is the 100th anniversary of the abandonment of Rosslare Fort in Wexford this year after the storm on Christmas Eve 1924 turned it into an island
#CHERISHlegacy
@discoveryprogramme.bsky.social
8 months ago
0
7
2
Weekend in Edinburgh for the rugby and return via Cramond Island world war defences repurposed for social commentary through graffiti
8 months ago
0
6
2
reposted by
Edward Pollard
The Discovery Programme
8 months ago
Happy St Brigid’s Day! The cult of St Brigid travelled beyond Ireland, including to Wales. In the CHERISH project we collaborated with colleagues in Wales researching sites at risk from climate change, including the lime kiln at St Brides Haven
#CHERISHlegacy
#RCAHMW
@aberuni.bsky.social
0
26
6
Turnberry Castle in Ayrshire, where Robert the Bruce was born, looks to be built on a promontory fort with ditch landward, landing places either side, lighthouse and view of Ailsa Craig
8 months ago
1
11
1
Our new article is out on climate change at the Swahili World Heritage Site of Kilwa in Tanzania and ideas to record and involve the local community
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
loading . . .
Climate Change, Coastal Heritage Digitization, and Local Community Engagement at the Ruins of Kilwa Kisiwani World Heritage Site, Tanzania
Kilwa Kisiwani is a UNESCO World Heritage Site on the coast of Tanzania. Monuments such as the Great Mosque and Husuni Kubwa, along with shipwrecks, ceramics, and beads, testify to the growth of Sw...
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00934690.2024.2439219
8 months ago
0
6
2
you reached the end!!
feeds!
log in