Sites in County Down

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Articles

Save Knock Iveagh!

We all want to believe that the places and heritage we love will be protected by somebody else for our children to enjoy. Some really important places in the UK benefit from protection by law and are supposed to be kept safe by our government bodies for the benefit of everyone. One such place is the ancient Neolithic burial site on the hill at Knock Iveagh. Although the burial site (cairn) is older than the pyramids and should be treated as a gem in the crown of beautiful Co Down, right now unfortunately it looks like somebody has dropped the ball because it is under terrible threat. Our public bodies have the power to save the hill and it is up to us to make sure they do so. That is why we are asking for your contribution to this important fight. Legal advice costs money, but this is a fight we can and must win.

gofundme.com/saveknockiveagh

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Neolithic homes unearthed at roadside

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/3613882.stm

A Bronze Age cemetery is one of a number of prehistoric settlements that have been discovered in County Down.

Neolithic homes, which date to 4000 BC, were also uncovered by archaeologists along the A1 road near Newry.

Evidence from the excavation is being preserved before work begins on upgrading the road at Loughbrickland.

Head archaeologist Kevin Beachus said the find, which he described as "significant" was far more then his team expected.

"We didn't expect quite so rich a find, we knew there would be something there or supposed there would be, but we had no idea it was going to be as wealthy as it is.

"The three neolithic houses which are about 6,000 years old, there are perhaps 30 maybe 35 in the entire UK known.

"We have got three of them, so they are very important.

"I think our findings are going to be used by universities, I would have thought, as a teaching aid for many years to come.

"The burials have been buried inside bronze age pots, each pot is buried in the centre of a circle or a ditch and then that is filled over the top."

The archaeologists, which were brought onto the site by the Roads Service, have only a few days to collect their findings before work begins on the project.

"I'm afraid the road is going to be bulldozing its way straight through the site in the next few days," said Mr Beachus.

However, he added that he was confident everything would be preserved in time and that future generations would learn a lot from the artefacts.

"I have got a wonderful team on site and I have no doubt that we will have it cleared by then."

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