1 A number of distinct gullies representing field boundaries dating to the Romano-British period were uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
A number of gullies representing field boundaries dating to the Romano-British period were uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 A number of distinct gullies representing field boundaries dating to the Romano-British period were uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
A number of gullies representing field boundaries dating to the Romano-British period were uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 Two ring ditches show as cropmarks.
2 One of the ring ditches has internal pits and looks like the Neolithic/Bronze Age hengiform structure at Barford (PRN 718).
3 Noted.
Two possible ring ditches, which date to the Neolithic and Bronze Age, are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 900m north west of Charlecote House.
1 One ‘D’ shaped single-ditched enclosure. Two part round-cornered enclosure. Twin ditches straight through site. Romano British pottery found. Site number 45.
2 Site 78 in survey
3 Perambulated. ...
Two enclosures, a trackway and parallel ditches are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Fragments of pottery found on the site dates to the Roman period. The site is located 600m south west of the cemetery, Barford.
1 Site is one element in a complex of cropmarks including enclosures and pits.
2 Air photos show the site as a double ring ditch with a faint possible ditch between ...
Aerial photographs showed a complex of cropmarks including a double ring ditch and pits. Excavation uncovered evidence of cremations and a probably hengi-form barrow of Neolithic and Bronze Age date. The site was under the M40 at Barford.
1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for the ditch of a ring ditch and the entrance. An irregular avenue of driven stakes approached the entrance at an oblique angle. Stake holes ...
Part of a ring ditch, dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age, was uncovered during and archaeological excavation. Stake holes and fragments of pottery were also found belonging to the same period. The site is located 300m south of Barford Wood.
1 Excavated in 1972. A ring ditch approximately 24m in diameter from SW to NE and 27.5m from SE to NW. In plan it formed a pear-shape. The ditch was ...
A pear-shaped ring ditch was found during an excavation. It was found to date to the Neolithic or Bronze Age. Inside the ring ditch was a sub circular line of pits, one of which contained a large flint blade, and the possible remains of a mound.