1 An enclosure, trackway and a potential semi-circular feature are evident on aerial photographs.
2 These features were investigated during evaluation ahead of construction of a football pitch at Bilton High ...
A trackway and enclosure, first seem on aerial photographs, was investigated as part of an archaeological evaluation; Iron Age pottery was recovered from the dithes of the features, suggesting occupation in the later part of the first millennium BC.
1 An undated gully was recorded during further evaluation on the revised site of a sports pitch at Bilton High School. It is likely to be of late Iron Age ...
An undated gully was recorded during further evaluation on the revised site of a sports pitch at Bilton High School. It is likely to be of late Iron Age or Romano-British date, like other features which have been recorded in the vicinity. It is possibly contemporary with the trackway also excavated on this site (MWA 12940).
1 A a partial rectilinear enclosure seen as a cropmark on aerial photographs 230m north west from Marriage Hill Farm was mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping ...
A partial rectilinear enclosure can be seen as a cropmark on aerial photographs 230m north west from Marriage Hill.
1 An enclosure and pits seen as crop marks on aerial photographs beside the Small Brook to the south of Bidford on Avon were mapped as part of the English ...
An enclosure and pits can be seen as crop marks on aerial photographs beside the Small Brook to the south of Bidford on Avon.
1 Features, likely to be representative of domestic occupation, were clustered at the southern end of a 1.5m wide trench excavated within the SAM of Tiddington Roman settlement, dating to ...
Features, likely to be representative of domestic occupation, were clustered at the southern end of a 1.5m wide trench excavated within the SAM of Tiddington Roman settlement, dating to the 1st Century AD.
1 –5 A crop mark that appearts to be part of a small enclosure apparent on aerial photographs was mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The ...
A crop mark that appearts to be part of a small enclosure is apparent on aerial photographs.
1 A crop mark, 250m east of Salford Road waste water treatment works, that appears to be part of a rectalinear enclosure seen on aerial photographs was mapped as part ...
A crop mark, 250m east of Salford Road waste water treatment works, that appears to be part of a rectalinear enclosure can be seen on aerial photographs.
1 Rectilinear crop marks and pits apparent on aerial photographs 650m south of Langston Farm Little Compton mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The crop ...
Rectilinear crop marks and pits are apparent on aerial photographs 650m south of Langston Farm Little Compton.
1 A 4m section of an Iron Age gully was found. 5 sherds of pottery were recovered from the fill.
An Iron Age gully containing Iron Age Pottery.
1 Possible hillfort. A large oval enclosure. Visited by Thomas. Slight traces of an earthwork survive around the NW quarter.
3 Air photographs indicate a possible enclosure of about 13 ha. ...
The possible site of an Iron Age hillfort. A large enclosure is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated on the west side of Boundary Covert. An alternative interpretation of these cropmarks is that they are natural features.
1 From Waterloo Cottages to Pinks Farm this bank is on the boundary of the parishes of Nuthurst and Beaudesert. A section of the bank just N of Pinks Farm ...
A linear feature is visible as an earthwork which forms part of the Hobditch Causeway and dates to the Iron Age. It is probably part of a boundary and is situated north east of Dean's Green.
1 Rectilinear crop marks visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The site is a possible prehistoric or Romano British settlement. ...
Rectilinear crop marks are visible on aerial photographs.
1 The torc was found during potato harvesting in a field at Middleton Hall in 1968 or 1969 at the above grid reference. The field in which the ...
Find spot - a torc, an armband or necklace made of gold, which was Iron Age in date. It was found 100m to the north east of Middleton Hall.
1 Two undated crop marks apparent on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
2 The more westerly of the two crop marks appears to ...
Two linear crop marks can be seen on aerial photographs 900m south east from Dunnington Court.
1 ‘Camp’.
2 Considered to be Roman.
3 The feature is situated on a hillside. It is completely devoid of any defensive qualities and is undoubtedly a quarry.
4 The idea that this ...
A linear earthwork, possibly dating to the Iron Age, is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. It is located 700m north east of Bird in Hand public house.
1 Double-ditched subrectangular enclosure shows on air photos. A second fainter enclosure is visible to the S.
3 Site is on a hilltop close to Rattleburrow Plantation. There are ...
The site of a double ditched enclosure. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The enclosure is may mark the site of an Iron Age settlement. Fragments of Iron Age pottery and a quern stone have been found here. The site is located at Rattleburrow Plantation.
1 Two large storage pits were recorded during evaluation at Tiddington Road. One was a classic example of a later prehistoric storage pit, with an undercutting profile. They may represent ...
Two large storage pits were recorded during evaluation at Tiddington Road and a further pit during the subsequent watching brief. They may represent a feature in the agricultural landscape in their own right, or they may be part of a larger nucleus of settlement.
1 First recorded by Stukeley. By 1920 it was 0.23m high, but in 1982 it had not been lowered very much. In 1982 two quadrants were excavated indicating that very ...
The site of a round barrow, probably of Bronze Age date. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated 750m south east of The Hollows.
1 A ‘quadrangular’ fort, ‘whose height and largeness do still shew the strength it was of’.
2 The camp crowns a rocky elevation 180m high. In the centre lay a Georgian ...
The remains of Oldbury Camp, an Iron Age hillfort which survives as an earthwork. It is situated 200m north of Oldbury Grange.
1 Earthwork identified by Bryn Gethin on LiDAR and modern aerial mapping. It could be an Iron Age defended enclosure or small Hill Fort.
2 Documentary research did not uncover evidence ...
Ditched earthwork is visible on LiDAR and modern aerial photographs. This could be the remains of a small Hillfort or defended enclosure. It could also be a seige castle.
1A pit containing early Iron Age pottery was discovered along with a pit likely to be of similar date. A four-post structure of probable Iron Age date was found. ...
Two pits of possible early Iron Age date were discovered and a four-post structure which was also likely to have been Iron Age in date.
1 A group of pits, which were too shallow to have been for storage purposes, were excavated. The majority contained domestic materials including pottery, querns, cremated animal bone, charcoal, crop ...
A group of Iron Age pits. Domestic materials were deposited in them, including pottery, querns and crop processing waste.
1 Three distinct groups of pits and/or postholes were located in Area B dating to the Middle-Late Iron Age.
Area of Middle-Late Iron Age Pits and Postholes from Area 'B' uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 Three distinct groups of pits and an L-shaped ditch were located in and around Area A dating to the Middle-Late Iron Age.
One of the pits (pit 32) contained a ...
Area of Middle-Late Iron Age Pits and L-shaped ditch from trial trenching and area excavation (Area 'A') uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.