The jury in the Stardust inquests has concluded its deliberations for the day, and will begin its third week of considering its verdicts when the court reconvenes next Monday.
Forty-eight people died when a fire ripped through the Artane nightclub in February 1981.
The 12-person jury, made up of seven women and five men, initially retired to consider their verdicts on Wednesday 3 April.
They deliberated for around four hours today and have, in total, done so for around 30 hours so far.
At the conclusion of proceedings today, Coroner Dr Myra Cullinane told the members of the "usual prohibitions" on discussing the matters with anybody and of the "sanctity of the jury room".
The Dublin District Coroner’s Court, sitting in the Pillar on the grounds of Rotunda Hospital, will sit again on Monday at 11am.
The court has heard how the jury has been given a questionnaire to be filled out dealing with each individual victim, and another set of questions dealing with the circumstances of the fire.
This morning in reply to a question from the jury, Dr Cullinane told them that they were "establishing facts".
In all, these fresh inquests sat for 122 days and heard testimony from 370 witnesses.
They got under way last April after a direction from the Attorney General who said that there had been an insufficiency of inquiry at the original inquests which were held in 1982.
The move followed a sustained campaign by the families.
In her charge to the jury last month, the coroner told the jury that there were five verdicts open to them - accidental death, death by misadventure, unlawful killing, an open verdict or a narrative verdict.
The legal teams representing the families of the victims have previously urged the jury to return verdicts of unlawful killing.