2 Two probable ring ditches of Neolithic/Bronze Age date show on air photographs.
Two Prehistoric ring ditches are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. They are located 300m west of Caldecote Hall.
1 Perfect leaf-shaped arrowhead of pale grey-brown flint. Found ‘N of the isolation hospital, on the S side of the railway’.
2 Old SMR Card.
3 Neolithic date confirmed.
Findspot - a leaf-shaped flint arrowhead of Neolithic date was found 700m north west of White House.
1 Visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs.
2 An ‘L’-shaped crop mark is probably part of a wide-ditched rectangular enclosure. An entrance is visible in the NE corner. A ...
The site of an enclosure of unknown date which is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is situated 300m east of Woodford Lodge.
1 On the N part of the fort ‘diverse flint stones’, about 10cm in length and polished have been found during ploughing.
3 Dugdale’s implement was a Neolithic flint or stone ...
Findspot - several flint axes were found within Oldbury Camp, 100m north of Oldbury.
1 One year after destroying a possible barrow (PRN 251), on ploughing the area a cottager from Hartshill found a stone axe.
2 A perforated axe made of blue stone and ...
Findspot - a stone axe of Neolithic or Bronze Age date was found in the area of Hartshill.
1 A collection of Neolithic flint comprising arrowheads, end scrapers, blade fragment, knives, flakes and a core found at this location.
2 Dating confirmed as Neolithic.
Findspot - a flint scatter, comprising various flint artefacts dating from the Neolithic period, was found 300m south east of Oldbury Camp.
1 A Neolithic site was discovered at the above grid reference. On this site blades predominate over flakes (13/9) and of these eleven blades and five flakes show retouch.
2 Confirmed ...
Findspot - flint implements of Neolithic date were found west of Caldecote.
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.