1 1965: Trench cut across a group of pits. Four small pits with associated stakeholes, but no finds. Also a number of large pits. The excavator considered these pits to ...
An excavation was undertaken where pits were visible on aerial photographs. There were no finds to date these features but they may have been Neolithic. The site was 250m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Mechanical sections were cut across a group of large pits. Before excavation it had been suggested that they were tree pits. The pits actually appeared to be archaeological ...
An excavation was undertaken where pits were visible on aerial photographs. Ditches, post holes and smaller pits were found. There was no firm dating evidence, but the features may have been Neolithic. The site was 400m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
2 Three sides of a possible trapezoidal enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 Dating narrowed to between the Neolithic and the Romano British periods.
Enclosures and linear features that are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. They may be prehistoric in date. They lie 380m southeast of Grendon Fields Farm.
1 A large complex of cropmark features including ring ditches, enclosures, pits and linear features. Excavation produced evidence for Neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age and Romano British occupation. ...
During an excavation evidence for a settlement was found. The features included pit clusters, ditches, enclosures and barrows. The settlement existed at the site from the Neolithic to the Roman period. It was situated east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 Undated small enclosures, linear features and pits show on air photographs.
3 During a field evaluation carried out by Warwickshire Museum in advance of construction of the Norton Lenchwick Bypass ...
Aerial photographs showed enclosures, pits and linear features at this site. Geophysical and field surveys produced evidence of further pits and of multi-period occupation. The site lies 500m north west of the weir at Broom.
Ring ditch and undated enclosure show on air photos.
2 Ring ditch and small rectangular enclosure show on air photograph.
3 Dating given: Neolithic to Bronze Age.
4 The ring ditch evident on ...
The site of a ring ditch dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age period and an enclosure which is undated. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs and are located 700m north west of Salford Priors.
3 Two side ditches of a possible cursus monument show on air photos. The side ditches are very straight, although it is not certain that this is a cursus monument.
4 ...
Two linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They may be the side ditches of a possible cursus, which dates to the Neolithic period, though this has not been proven. The site is located 550m east of the church, Charlecote.
1 Small elongated rectangular enclosure with elliptical ends and traces of two entrances, orientated N-S.
2 This is a small cursus type enclosure which was investigated by Mrs P M Christie ...
A rectangular enclosure, ditches and post holes were found during an archaeological excavation. The site has been interpreted as a long barrow, cursus or a mortuary enclosure. The site appears to date to the Neolithic period and is located 1.3km north of Charlecote.
1 A ring ditch shows on air photographs.
2 Complete excavation by W Ford in 1969 exposed an unbroken enclosing ditch with a diameter of 22m between the internal banks. The ...
Excavation of a ring ditch shown on aerial photographs uncovered evidence to suggest this was a Bronze Age barrow. A Roman pit was found to the west of the ditch. The site is 400m east of Hail End Bridge, Charlecote.
1 A gully containing a pottery sherd with grooved decoration of possible late Neolithic date along with a small amount of worked flint was recorded during evaluation at Bilton High ...
A gully containing a pottery sherd with grooved decoration of possible late Neolithic date along with a small amount of worked flint were recorded during an evaluation on the site of Bilton High School; these suggest activity on the site during the third millennium BC.
1 Crop marks seen on aerial photographs indicate a small multiphase settlement consisting of three rectilinear enclosures, numerous pits and a curvilinear boundary ditch, which partially defines the site. The ...
Settlement with pits, linear ditches and ditched enclosures are apparent on aerial photographs near South Hill Farm near Long Compton.
1 Two parallel pit alignments that in places become continuous ditches, a third ditch set 40m to the east of the pit alignments and a diffusely defined circular feature, which ...
Two parallel pit alignments that in places become continuous ditches, a third ditch set 40m to the east of the pit alignments and a diffusely defined circular feature, which may be a degraded ring ditch, appear on aerial photographs. Area has been used for mineral extraction and has been landscaped.
1 A ditch was found running NW-SE. Its unusual alignment suggests that it predates the inclosure of Bodymoor Heath. No finds were recovered from the fill.
A ditch on a completely different alignment to those forming the inclosed field system.
1 Scheduled long barrow on Long Hill.
2 About 30 x 12m x 1m, with little appreciable diminution of breadth or height.
3 The barrow is situated at the above grid reference ...
The site of a possible long barrow dating to the Neolithic period. It is visible as an earthwork and on aerial photographs. Flint artefacts dating to this period have also been found near the site. It is located south west of Loxley.
2 A large double ditched oval enclosure overlying a narrow rectangular feature (PRN 5202). It is suggested that this is the remains of a henge. Surface evidence of a semicircular ...
An earthwork, which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs it has been suggested as a possible Iron Age Hill Fort but is more likely to be a Neolithic Enclosure with Iron Age Features within it. It is located 600m south east of Thornton Wood at Ettington in South Warwickshire.
1 ‘Tumulus’ marked.
2 Case was told that the barrow could still be traced but had not visited the site.
4 Beesley records that a small circle of stones was ploughed up ...
The possible site of a Neolithic or Bronze Age round barrow, a circular mound surrounded by a ditch, usually concealing a burial. The site is located on Gallow Hill.
1 The long mound just N of the King Stone was thought by Stukeley and many others (notably Crawford) to be a long barrow. Ravenhill’s excavation appeared to suggest that ...
The site of a possible barrow which dates to between the Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age periods. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated 850m south of The Hollows.
1 The existence of this monument is known largely from a set of antiquarian drawings preserved in the Gough collection. It was recorded by Stukeley who described it as being ...
The site of a round barrow which dated from between the Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age periods. It is known through documentary evidence and was situated 800m south of The Hollows.
1 In 1773 a cottager inclosed an unnoticed ‘tumulus’ which stood about one and three quarter miles SE of Oldbury. This tumulus was about 24.5m wide at the ...
The possible site of a round barrow, an artificial mound of earth usually constructed to cover a burial. The barrow may have dated between the Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age periods. It was situated 500m south east of Oldbury. This site may equally be a Windmill Mound or a Romano-British Pottery Kiln.
1 The skeletal material represented at least four indiviuals which had been buried on a low knoll at the top of the ridge. The results of studying the bones ...
A low knoll on top of ridge remains uncertain if it is entirely natural, there is a distinct possiblity that it was an older burial mound. Human remains of a near full skeleton and three partials were discovered.
1 Recorded as a possible cursus, 440 yards long. Cropmarks transcribed.
2 Double ditches visible on a number of aerial photographs taken in 1966. A number of additional features are also ...
A double ditched enclosure is visible on a number of aerial photographs, running N-S for 400m, with the ditches c.70m apart. It lies approx. 350m to the west of Pastures Farm, Loxley.
1 Elongated rectangular enclosure with straight sides and right angled corners shows on aerial photographs. This is probably a cursus monument and is about 260m long and 27 to 30m ...
A long rectangular feature, possibly a cursus dating to the Neolithic period, is visible on aerial photographs. It is located 1km north east of the church, Sherbourne.
1 One of two penannular gullies uncovered south of Langley Brook. This, the earlier, was smaller and had an entrance facing the south east. A Prehistoric date is ...
A Prehistoric gully uncovered during excavations connected with the Birmingham Northern Relief Road project.
1 One of two penannular gullies uncovered south of Langley Brook. This, the later was the largest of the two and had a west facing entrance. A Prehistoric ...
A Prehistoric penannular gully uncovered during excavations connected with the Birmingham Northern Relief Road project.