1 Possible enclosures and linear features identified on air photographs.
2Linear features and enclosures visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The earliest ...
Linear features and enclosures that are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features are undated but are situated west of Little Wolford.
1 Twelve people were evicted from the hamlet of Drakenage in 1497.
2 The name in various forms occurs from 1183 onwards.
3 Marked as a depopulated place.
4 Air cover shows ridge ...
Earthworks indicate the site of a deserted settlement of Medieval date. The site is situated 300m north east of Drakenage Farm.
1 A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School. It was probably a drainage ditch or field boundary similar ...
A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School.
1 Ditch 1001 probably represented a field boundary ditch, and another ditch may have been part of the same Romano British field system.
2There was a scatter of residual Roman pottery ...
Romano-British field boundaries found during excavation in the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle. These were possibly part of a larger field system aligned on Ryknild Street.
1 Aerial photography shows two ring ditches that are possibly Bronze Age Round Barrows. Other possible cropmarks also visible in the same field.
2 It is highly unlikely that ring ...
Two ring ditches visible on aerial photographs. Possibly Bronze Age round barrows.
1 1968: part of the complex was excavated, which included a pair of ring ditches and an elongated enclosure. Five trenches were opened up and revealed: Site C – a ...
Two ring ditches of Neolithic date were found during an archaeological excavation. The ring ditches were situated within an enclosure. They were located 500m east of Bretford.
1 Excavated in 1972. A ring ditch approximately 24m in diameter from SW to NE and 27.5m from SE to NW. In plan it formed a pear-shape. The ditch was ...
A pear-shaped ring ditch was found during an excavation. It was found to date to the Neolithic or Bronze Age. Inside the ring ditch was a sub circular line of pits, one of which contained a large flint blade, and the possible remains of a mound.
2 Possible ring ditch shows on aerial photographs. The ditch could have been one of the features sectioned by a pipeline in 1970.
3 Report of pipeline section.
The site of a possible ring ditch of Neolithic or Bronze Age date. It was situated 1km north of Alveston.
3 A ring ditch with a possible central pit shows on aerial photographs.
4 Ring ditch and cursus on gravel terrace of north of the River Dene, close to confluence with ...
A ring ditch with a possible central pit, dating between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photography. The site is located 500m east of the church, Charlecote.
2 One ring ditch and one small oval enclosure show on air photographs.
The site of a ring ditch of Neolithic or Bronze Age date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs.
2 Probable Neolithic/Bronze age ring ditch shows on air photographs. A second possible example also shows.
4 1968: Rescue excavation of a ring ditch in advance of bypass construction. The site ...
The site of a possible ring ditch dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age period which was excavated. It was situated 300m north east of Baginton Bridge.
2 Two possible Neolithic/Bronze Age ring ditches show on aerial photographs.
Two possible ring ditches of Neolithic or Bronze Age date. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The ring ditches are located 1km south east of Bretford.
1 Cropmarks of three sides of a rectilinear enclosure. Former field boundaries and ploughed out ridge and furrow can also be seen but the possible enclosure is on a ...
On the 2010 google earth map three sides of a rectangular enclosure with a possible ring ditch to the north-west is visible. Other linear features are also visible along with ploughed out ridge and furrow.
1 2010 google earth shows a cropmark of a ring ditch. It is c30m is diameter. There are other less clear linear features and possible enclosures to the east on ...
A c30m diameter ring ditch shows as a cropmark on 2010 google earth maps. It is c340m south-east of Tythe Farm, Monks Kirby
1 An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. ...
An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. Pottery analysis suggests that the main occupation phase was mid-1st - early 2nd-century AD.
2 Undated settlement site, consisting of penannular gullies, enclosures and linear features, shows on air photographs. On morphological grounds the site is probably of Iron Age and Roman date.
2 At ...
The site of settlement which is visible as a cropmarks on aerial photographs. It includes enclosures, ring ditches and linear features which have been interpreted as possible boundary ditches. The date of the settlement is unknown but it is likely to span from the Bronze Age to possibly the Roman period. It is situated 1km south west of Rushington.
2 A ring ditch shows on aerial photographs. It is not certain that this is archaeological and it does not show on other aerial photographs. If of archaeological origin it ...
A ring ditch of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The ring ditch is situated 500m north east of Thurlaston.
2 A subrectangular enclosure is attached to a linear ditch (PRN 3328). This enclosure encloses a ring ditch/penannular enclosure and there are faint traces of crop marks outside the enclosure ...
A sub-rectangular enclosure surrounding a smaller enclosure or ring ditch. These features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 600m north of Bourton on Dunsmore.
2 Possible Neolithic/Bronze Age ring ditch shows on aerial photographs.
The site of a Neolithic or Bronze Age ring ditch. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The ring ditch is situated 600m south west of Bretford.
2 Possible Neolithic/Bronze Age ring ditch, very narrow in diameter, shows on air photographs.
3 The ring ditch and a crop mark 25m further to the west were mapped as part ...
A ring ditch of Neolithic or Bronze Age date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 1km south of Bretford.
2 Neolithic/Bronze Age ring ditch shows on aerial photographs.
The site of a ring ditch of Neolithic or Bronze Age date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The ring ditch may represent the remains of a round barrow or an enclosure. It is situated 400m east of Church Lawford.
1 Excavations undertaken between 1980 and 1985 in advance of gravel extraction. Two ring ditches were examined in Field 3. The first was in the NW corner of the field ...
Ring ditches, which were visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, were excavated in advance of gravel extraction. They were dated to the Bronze Age. Flint flakes and tools were recovered. The site is to the south west of Wasperton.
1 Evaluation of a cropmark site in advance of quarrying was unable to clarify the status of trackways associated with a known Roman settlement, (SAM 162). Open area excavation revealed ...
Evidence of Iron Age/ Romano British settlement uncovered during a series of evaluations and excavations. The site is located 600m to the east of Marsh Farm, Salford Priors.
1 An archaeological evaluation was carried out by the Warwickshire Museum on land at Kisses Barn Farm, Polesworth, in October 1992. Various finds and features were located dating to ...
An archaeological survey at this site found evidence of features and finds dating from the Early Mesolithic to the Iron Age. It is to the northeast of Swing Bridge, Polesworth.