A trackway of unknown date is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is situated 600m south of Pounce Hill Farm.
The line of a trackway, possibly dating from the Prehistoric period, exists in parts as a tarmaced road and partially as an earthwork, which is visible on aerial photographs. It runs north from Warwick Road, Henley to Camp Hill.
Trackways and enclosures of unknown date which are visible on aerial photographs as crop marks.
Medieval holloway located 800m north of Glasshouse Wood.
The route of an abandoned road or hollow way dating from the Medieval to the Imperial period. It ran from Ullenhall Lane towards Oldberrow and survives as an earthwork.
An Anglo Saxon trackway dating to the Early Medieval period and referred to as a 'grenan weg' (greenway) in an 11th century charter. The route roughly follows that of Gospel Oak Lane.
A linear feature known from documentary evidence to be an Anglo Saxon ridgeway dating to the Migration and Early Medieval periods. It is leads into Shipston from the south west.
The site of the deserted settlement of Ascote which dated to the Medieval period. The earthworks of house platforms and hollow ways are visible and documentary evidence exists about its desertion. It is located 200m south of Ascote Hill.
An Early Medieval road or trackway which is referred to in a 10th century charter. It now forms the Banbury to Southam road and runs along the parish boundary of Wormleighton.
A rectilinear bank and ditches can be seen on aerial photographs in the field imediately to the east of Wood Bevington Farm.