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 A scatter of pits containing cremated bone and flints, the preservation of finds was generally inferior to SMR 8818, found across the river.
2 Dating given as from the ...
The site of a pit cluster. Some of the pits contained cremated bone and flint and dated to the Neolithic period whilst others were of Early Bronze Age date. The pit cluster was situated 1km north east of Bretford.
1 An open area excavation, Area E, carried out in advance of the A435 Norton Lenchwick Bypass revealed Neolithic activity. The later Neolithic was represented by at least one ...
Excavation in advance of road development, uncovered signs of Neolithic activity, including pits, cremation pits, worked flint and polished stone axes. The site is to the northwest of Broom.
2 Linear features show S and SW of an undated settlement enclosure (PRN 1497). These linear features may represent part of a field system. A possible scatter lies alongside one ...
A complex of curvilinear cropmarks, circular enclosures and pits visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. This site is located 300m west of Salford Priors.
1 The site was excavated by Warwick Museum in advance of the building of the M40 motorway and is now totally destroyed. Finds included Beaker fragments, rare in Warwickshire, and ...
A boundary ditch, thought to be Bronze Age in date, was discovered during an excavation. Finds from the site included fragments of early Bronze Age pottery. The site now lies under the M40.
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.