2 Pits and linear features show on aerial photographs.
Linear features and pits of unknown date show up on aerial photographs at this site 700m south east of Snowford Bridge, Long Itchington.
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.
2 Linear features, perhaps forming an enclosure, show on air photographs.
Undated linear features, possibly forming an enclosure, are visible on aerial photographs. They are located 750m north west of Clifford Chambers Bridge.
2 Possible ring ditch or enclosure, other enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. Some of these marks are probably natural. The crop marks are impossible to plot because ...
The site of a Roman settlement. During partial excavation of the site, enclosures, ditches, houses and a possible corn drying kiln were found. The site was located 1km east of Bidford on Avon.
2 Enclosure with E entrance shows on air photographs. Also possible pits to east.
An undated enclosure and possible pits, show up on aerial photographs at this site 500m south of Hill Wootton.
2 Rectangular enclosure, linear features and possible pits show on air photographs.
3 WMA summary, June 1996 excavation, where water main runs through cropmark. The north eastern ditch contained Middle ...
An undated enclosure, pits and linear features show up on aerial photograhs. Part excavation found Iron Age pottery. The site is 300m west of Sherbourne Hill.
1 Excavations carried out in 1967 on site threatened by gravel extraction. The site shows on aerial photographs as a series of intersecting rectangular enclosures covering about 3.7 ha. An ...
Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site was excavated prior to development. Ditches, pits, a semi-circular feature, and some occupational debris were found, suggesting a rural settlement of Roman date. It was situated 300m east of Hail End Bridge.
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 Exacavtion recorded Mid to Late Iron Age occupation. Comprised of an enclosure and a few associated gullies. Subsequent Late Iron Age to 1st/2nd century AD occupation evidence was also ...
Exacavation recorded Mid to Late Iron Age occupation, comprised of an enclosure and a few associated gullies. Subsequent Late Iron Age to 1st/2nd century AD occupation evidence was also present, including gullies, pits and boundary ditches.
1 A small area of cropmark features are visible immediately to the E of Milcote Manor. They may be part of a larger complex, recorded as MWA1297 to the East. ...
A small area of cropmark features are visible immediately to the E of Milcote Manor. They may be part of a larger complex, recorded as MWA1297 to the East.
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 Post-medieval features were identified by archaeological investigations. They included remains of possible ditches, pits and gullies. Pottery dating from the 17th – 19th centuries was recovered from ...
Several post-medieval features, including the surviving remains of possible ditches and pits may relate to post-medieval property boundaries, gardening or rubbish disposal activities within those properties.
1 A medieval enclosure with several phases of ditches was identified. A single oven was found near the south-west corner. Within the enclosure were a series of ditches, pits and ...
A sequence of medieval enclosure ditches aligned broadly parallel to Gypsy Lane, with a return at the south-west corner to form the southern boundary. A single oven was uncovered near the south-west corner of the enclosure.
3 Air photographs reveal a large rectangular enclosure, linear features, a possible penannular gully and large blobs (?old gravel pits). Some of these cropmarks could be of 17th century date ...
The site of an undated enclosure and several linear features. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is located 650m south west of the sewage works, Milcote.
3 Enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. These enclosures are of uncertain date.
Aerial photographs show enclosures, linear features and a pit as cropmarks. The features are all of uncertain date. The site is 500m south west of the church at Luddington.
1 A series of features were identified during evaluation off Church Lane, Middleton. They suggest settlement in the 12th-13th centuries, away from the focus of the original settlement. A large ...
A series of features were identified during evaluation off Church Lane, Middleton. They suggest settlement in the 12th-13th centuries, away from the focus of the original settlement.
1 An enclosure visible as a cropmark on satellite imagery. It is located off Curdworth Lane, Wishaw. A pit is visible as a cropmark in the centre of the enclosure.
An enclosure visible as a cropmark on satellite imagery. It is located off Curdworth Lane, Wishaw.
1 A flat-based pit was recorded during strip, map and sample excavation at Middleton, measuring 2.7m by 2.65m, with three stakeholes within this pit. It was interpreted as a sunken-featured ...
A flat-based pit was recorded during strip, map and sample excavation at Middleton; it was interpreted as a sunken-featured building of likely Anglo-Saxon date, although the chronology of the feature was not clear.
1 A pit was uncovered containing 20 sherds of Iron Age pottery, and an adjacent gully may date to the same period.
Evidence of Iron Age activity uncovered beneath the floor of a barn at Grange Farm, Cosford.
1 An evaluation in advance of development uncovered evidence of medieval activity. The remains included a small ditch, a pit and a probable stone drain. These had cessy fills indicative ...
Medieval features, probably associated with former dwellings on the street frontages, were uncovered to the rear of The Kings Arms and Castle Hotel, Kenilworth.
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.
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 A series of enclosures, first recorded through geophysical survey, were subsequently evaluated by trial trenching. The trenching recorded a series of structures, pits, gullies and boundary features related ...
A series of enclosures, first recorded through geophysical survey, were subsequently evaluated by trial trenching. The trenching recorded a series of structures, pits, gullies and boundary features related to a Romano-British farmstead.