1 Rectilinear feature to the west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National Mapping Project (NMP) ...
Rectilinear feature to the south west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs.
1 The banks, ditches and ridge and furrow ploughing evident on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
2 The bank is probably a ...
Banks, ditches and ridge and furrow ploughing are evident on aerial photographs adjacent to Bilton Hill. Rig now levelled.
1 Earthwork banks and a ditch seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping ...
Earthwork banks and a ditch can be seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle.
1 Archaeological observation of soil stripping on this site in 1998 (WA 8325) revealed the remains of a ditch running apx SE-NW but not on the exact alignment of the ...
The remains of a ditch, possibly of Medieval date, were found during an excavation. The ditch might be part of a larger Medieval field system at Cawston.
1 An archaeological evaluation (WA 8218) which took place in 1998 at this location revealed the remains of a Medieval field boundary ditch. The ditch contained fragments of skull which ...
The remains of a Medieval ditch, possibly a field boundary, were found during archaeological work at Alveston Manor Hotel.
1 Archaeological evaluation identified traces of earthworks. Trial trenching revealed that these earthworks were probably the disturbed remains of ridge and furrow. An undated ditch was probably a ...
The remains of ridge and furrow indicate a system of Medieval open field agriculture. An archaeological evaluation revealed traces of ridge and furrow as well as a ditch, which was probably a field boundary. The remains were situated in the grounds of Newton Regis School.
1 The Manor House is fairly remote from the village centre, and is surrounded by pasture fields, which show vague and indefinite earthworks. Two footpaths cross Wardens Close, ...
The possible site of an area a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. There are earthworks of ditches, house platforms and ridge and furrow which are visible on the ground and on aerial photographs. It is located 400m north of the church, Fenny Compton.
1 Cotswold Archaeological Trust (CAT) was commissioned to undertake an archaeological evaluation on land to the E of Harbury Lane, Ufton. The evaluation indicated that Medieval and Post Medieval deposits, ...
Archaeological investigation revealed the remains of buildings and ridge and furrow dating to the Medieval period. The site is located 500m south of the church, Ufton.