The site of two possible round barrows dating to the Bronze Age. Alternatively they may represent Anglo Saxon burials of the Migration or Early Medieval periods. They are known from documentary sources and were located 800m east of Burnt Firs.
Two round barrows, dating to the Bronze Age, are thought to have been located 700m from Compton Verney House, Compton Verney, in Bowshot Wood.
The site of two possible round barrows of Bronze Age date. The site is located 600m north of the church at Gaydon.
The site of a Bronze Age (2600-600BC) round barrow, a mound usually constructed to cover a human burial. The barrow has been partially excavated but survives as an earthwork. It is situated 300m north of the junction of Hinckley Road and Gipsey Lane.
The site of a round barrow, an artificial mound built to cover a burial. It dates from the Bronze Age and contained two cremation burials and a later A-S burial (MWA6001). It is on the W side of Harthill Hayes Country Park and survives as an earthwork.
The possible site of a Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The site is suggested by documentary evidence. It site is located 100m east of Gibbet Hill.
Three Bronze Age burials are recorded as being found 600m north west of Brandon Castle. The burials may have been concealed within a round barrow.
The possible site of a round barrow, which is probably of Bronze Age date. The site is located 1km to the north west of Loxley.
Ring ditches, which were visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, were excavated in advance of gravel extraction. They were dated to the Bronze Age. Flint flakes and tools were recovered. The site is to the south west of Wasperton.
The site of a mound. It may possibly be Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth built to conceal a burial. It is situated 300m south west of Combe Abbey.