2 Linear crop marks show on aerial photographs. Some of these marks appear to form an enclosure.
Linear features, of unknown date, appear as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 100m north of Parlour Spinney.
1 A series of fairly vague cropmark features were recorded south of Broom by the National Mapping Project. They may relate to drainage features in this area, but may also ...
A series of fairly vague cropmark features were recorded south of Broom by the National Mapping Project. They may relate to drainage features in this area, but may also not be of archaeological origin.
1 Broadly SW NE linear feature visible on Aps. Appears to align with the gateway to the Lunt Romano-British fort at the westeren end but at the eastern end ...
Linear feature visible on APs, probably a fairly modern path but may relate to the Lunt RB fort.
2 Linear features, irregular enclosures and subrectangular enclosures indicate an undated settlement. Morphologically the site is likely to be of Iron Age and Romano British date.
3 The site was shallow ...
Cropmarks on aerial photographs showing linear features, irregular and subrectangular enclosures, suggests that this is the site of an undated settlement. It is situated 250m south east of Waterloo Rise, Alveston.
2 Undated complex of enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs.
3 No diagnostic finds were recovered during a site visit.
The site of undated enclosures and linear features which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. It is possible that they are evidence of a settlement. The site is located 500m north east of the church, Luddington.
2 Prehistoric pit alignment shows on aerial photographs.
3 Site 51 in survey.
4 Dating revised to between the late Bronze Age and the late Iron Age.
5 This site was further investigated ...
A Prehistoric pit alignment, pits set at intervals along a single, or parallel, line. It has alternatively been interpreted as a grubbed out hedgerow. The feature is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m north east of Welford Hill.
2 Enclosures, pits and linear features show on aerial photographs indicating a settlement of uncertain date.
Aerial photographs show enclosures, pits and linear features. These are evidence for a settlement of uncertain date. The site is 400m west of Rumerhill Coppice, Welford on Avon.
12 Possible undated trackway shows on aerial photographs, to the south of a ?multiphased enclosure. Parts of other enclosure ditches are also visible on the same aerial photographs.
3 Some possible ...
The site of a possible trackway which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs, together with segments of enclosure ditches. This complex is of unknown date. These features are located to the west of Headland Road.
1 Air photograph.
2 Subrectangular double-ditched enclosure with associated linear feature shows on air photograph.
3 The site lies on Baginton-Lillington gravels. A salvage excavation was mounted in 1970 in advance of ...
Aerial photographs showed evidence of a double ditched enclosure and a linear feature. The site was part excavated prior to gravel extraction. Iron Age pits and post holes were uncovered. The site is 400m northeast of Brandon Marsh Nature Reserve.
1 The village, well-placed on a triangle of land above the junction of two little streams, was formerly defended by entrenchments running all round it; these probably enclosed an area ...
A linear feature is visible as an earthwork at Great Wolford. It probably dates to the Medieval period.
2 Linear feature shows on air photograph. At one point this appears to cut a small oval enclosure.
3 Noted.
A linear feature of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated on Alveston Hill.
2 Enclosures, penannular gullies and linear features show on air photographs. This probably indicates the location of a settlement site of unknown date.
4 No surface indications.
5 ...
Enclosures and linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They suggest that this might be a settlement site. Finds collected from the ground surface suggest the site might be of Roman date. It is located 800m west of Alveston.
1 A series of north-south, roughly parallel linear features were revealed in 4 trenches. These were of varied depth and contained small amounts of bone, ceramic building material and ...
Linear features of unknown date were uncovered during trial trenching in connection with the Birmingham Northern Relief Road project. They are situated 600m northeast of the church at Curdworth.
1 Two medieval furrow markings uncovered during observation of ground works for a new teaching block.
2 A number of medieval furrows running roughly east-west across the site were recorded during ...
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation located 100m west of the ruins of Alcester Abbey.
1 Parch marks seen on aerial photographs may be the remains of farm buildings that are visible on earlier aerial photographs.
Linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They may be the remains of farm buildings shown on earlier aerial photographs. The site is located 200m north west of Far Popehill Spinney.
Imperial linear allotment features
1 A 19th century garden trench and stone-lined conduit were uncovered during an archaeological evaluation ahead of a residential development at the Allotment Site, Napton on ...
A 19th century linear feature, possibly a garden trench, and stone-lined conduit were uncovered during archaeological work. They were found at the north end of Howcombe Lane, Napton on the Hill.
1 A cropmark at this location was described by Mrs Hewitt-Winch during a site visit to Old Milverton in August 1998, though it was not then visible. It had been ...
A linear feature was visible as a cropmark at this site, which lies 450m south of Old Milverton. The feature is undated.
1 A Neolithic ditch aligned east-west was found on the southern part of the site. It spanned three trenches and a single flint flake was recovered. Several worked ...
Prehistoric features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court, included ditches, gulleys, a pit, postholes and Neolithic worked flint.
1 Cropmark of linear features shows on aerial photographs.
Several linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date and are located at Eversfield.
1 An archaeological evaluation of land at Coneybury Farm, Middleton, involving background research, a geophysical survey and trial trenching, revealed only minimal evidence of archaeological activity. Although a number of ...
Linear features whose function is not known. They are of unknown or early modern date. They were recorded during an excavation and are situated to the east of Hunts Green, Middleton.
1 An archaeological evaluation at the former Highways Depot, Station Rd, Alcester (SP08525768), recovered evidence for Romano-British boundaries and a possible medieval ridge and furrow field system, but found no ...
Roman boundary features recorded during several phases of archaeological fieldwork in Station Road, Alcester.
2 A linear feature shows on air photos and is closely associated with two intersecting rectangular enclosures (PRN 46).
A linear feature of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m north of London Road.
2 Small irregular oval enclosure shows on air photographs. This is cut by or cuts a linear feature.
3 Small oval enclosure may be Neolithic or Bronze Age, although a ...
An oval enclosure and a linear feature are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated at Alveston Hill, south east of Stratford upon Avon.
1 Great Packington has no village at all, the church stands by itself in the park. Army occupation has obscured the site. There are signs of buildings near to the ...
An enclosure, linear features and a trackway are visible on aerial photographs. These, together with the isolated church, suggest a Medieval deserted settlement. The site is 200m north of St James's Church, Great Packington.