1 1953: Animal bones, pot boilers, Roman pottery and piles found in a marsh. The dating given to this pottery was purely tentative. The pottery and most of the other ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Roman period is situated 300m southeast of Bramcote Hall.
1 Several shallow gullies formed the earliest phase of activity on the western part of the site, some of them contained small quantities of pottery dated to the late Bronze ...
Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age Activity at Coton Park indicating a transient episode of settlement.
2 Undated settlement site, consisting of penannular gullies, enclosures and linear features, shows on air photographs. On morphological grounds the site is probably of Iron Age and Roman date.
2 At ...
The site of settlement which is visible as a cropmarks on aerial photographs. It includes enclosures, ring ditches and linear features which have been interpreted as possible boundary ditches. The date of the settlement is unknown but it is likely to span from the Bronze Age to possibly the Roman period. It is situated 1km south west of Rushington.
2 Adjacent to the cursus (MWA1921) is an oval or D-shaped enclosure which has a W entrance and appears to enclose two penannular gullies. This may, on morphological grounds, be ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Iron Age. Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. It is located 1km north east of the church, Sherbourne.
1 The remains of a settlement dating to the later Bronze Age were located during an evaluation.
2 Dating given as late Bronze Age – Iron Age.
The remains of a settlement from the later Bronze Age were found during an excavation. The remains included pits and ditches. The site lies 600m east of the church at Ryton-on Dunsmore.
1 AP.
2 Large subrectangular enclosure with subdivisions shows on aerial photographs.
3 A geophysical survey carried out during 1992 identified the cropmark complex seen on APs. The complex comprises an ...
A Prehistoric enclosure, linear features and a possible ring ditch are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. These features may represent the remains of a settlement. The site is located 300m north of Lime Tree Avenue, Rugby.
1 In the layer beneath the toe of the Roman rampart a number of hearths were uncovered. Two of these consisted of small pits cutting the pre-rampart turf line, and ...
Several hearths of Prehistoric date were found during an excavation and may represent the site of a settlement. Various Prehistoric finds were also recovered. The site was located in the area of Tibbets Close, Alcester.
2 Pit alignments, penannular gullies, pits and enclosures indicate a probable Iron Age settlement site.
3 Dating revised to Late Bronze Age – Iron Age.
Pit alignments, gullies and enclosures are visible on aerial photographs and possibly indicate the site of a settlement dating to the Iron Age. It is located 500m west of Walton Wood.
2 Several small oval and subrectangular enclosures, pits and linear features show on air photographs. The small enclosures and pits probably indicate an Iron Age settlement.
3 Dating revised to Late ...
Several small enclosures, pits, and linear features show up on aerial photographs, and probably represent an Iron Age settlement. The site is located 600m north west of Ratley Church.
1 Part of a probable subrectangular enclosure and linear features show on aerial photographs in Warwick Museum. During survey in 1985 a dense scatter of Iron Age pottery, animal bone ...
The possible site of an Bronze Age/ Iron Age settlement and midden. An enclosure and linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Large quantities of decorated Iron Age pottery and animal bone have been recovered from the site, which lies 400m north east of Beaman's Covert.
1) Geophysical survey (magnetometry) by ArchaeoPhysica Ltd has recorded evidence for at least two phases of settlement at this location. Features identified include round huts (including possible evidence for internal ...
Geophysical survey has recorded evidence for at least two phases of settlement at this location. A large number of finds recovered from this area through metal detecting and fieldwalking suggest that this settlement dates to the Bronze Age/Early Iron Age periods. The quantities of finds recovered also suggests the presence of a midden site. This site lies 500m west of Upper Chelmscote.
1 Bronze age pits and hearths were identified at Sharmer Farm in 1972. It is suggested the features represent either a pot boiling site or funeral pyres (WA 7440).
2 ...
The site of Bronze Age pits and hearths possibly associated with a settlement or funeral pyres. The site lies 500m east of Frizmore Hill, Harbury.