2 Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, show on aerial photographs as crop marks.
3 Linear crop marks showing on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National ...
Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date and are situated 200m northwest of Bodymoor Heath Bridge.
1 Tumulus marked.
2 ?Barrow, now destroyed. On Lammas Hill.
3 Excavated 1950s, B Hobley, windmill.
4 This feature was excavated by Coventry Museum who concluded that it was a windmill mound.
5 Scheduling ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow would date to the Bronze Age. The site is located on Lammas Hill. The results of an excavation in the 1950s concluded that it was actually a windmill mound.
2 A system of subrectangular enclosures attached to a linear ditch shows on aerial photographs. This is overlain by a later deerpark.
3 Ditches described above mapped as part of English ...
Enclosures and linear features that are of unknown date. They are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs and are situated 700m north of Middleton Hall. Possibly part of a prehistoric field system.
1 Hill Farm, Finham. Neolithic/Bronze Age tumulus. This ploughed-out mound was found to be outside the land take of the Kenilworth Bypass. A drainage trench in 1932 produced a Bronze ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably would have dated to the Bronze Age. The site lies 200m west of Finham Green.
1 At SP4288 are two mounds which were first noted by their remarkable silhouette on an E-W hedgeline which crosses them. 1960: Both mounds have been spread by the plough. ...
The site of two possible round barrows, circular mounds of earth usually concealing a burial. They probably dated to the Bronze Age. The site is located 500m east of Shelford.
1 There is an undoubted sepulchral mound. It has no encircling ditch.
2 The labourers employed missed the deposit and a few fragments only of ancient pottery were found. 1968: This ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth that was usually built to conceal a burial. It probably dates to the Bronze Age and is situated 500m south west of Coton House. Alternatively, the mound may be a windmill mound.
1 Gibbet Hill was called ‘Loesby’s Gibbet’ in 1729 and is to be identified with Pelgrimslowe of c1350.
2 Bloxam quotes from a letter of E Ashmole to Dugdale (1657) which ...
The possible site of a Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The site is suggested by documentary evidence. It site is located 100m east of Gibbet Hill.
2 Pit alignment, probably of Prehistoric date, shows on air photographs.
4 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
5 Date narrowed down to between the late Bronze Age and the late Iron Age.
6 Aerial ...
A linear feature, possibly a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photogrpahs. It is situated 600m north of Bubbenhall.
4 Probable prehistoric pit alignment, which cuts off a bend in the Avon, shows on aerial photographs.
5 The field is flat and featureless, no surface material.
6 Dating revised to between ...
Aerial photographs suggest that this is probably the site of a Prehistoric pit alignment, pits set at intervals along a single line or parallel lines. It is situated 200m south of Rock Spinney at Bubbenhall.
2 It has been suggested that these marks indicate a large villa.
3 Enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs. There is no evidence to support the suggestion made by ...
Cropmarks, visible on aerial photographs, show undated enclosures and linear features. They lie in fields 100m east of Warwick sewage works.
1 Barrow, site only, near the site of a demolished church at Newnham Regis. Finds included inhumation burial of unusually large size…in upright position.
2 Authors refer to a tumulus near ...
The possible site of a round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The round barrow was probably of Bronze Age date and contained a human burial. It was located at King's Newnham.
2 Probable Prehistoric multiple alignment shows on aerial photograph. This possible pit alignment cuts across a peninsula of land formed by the River Avon.
3 Linear features will be BA to ...
A linear feature, probably a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is probably of Prehistoric date. The feature is located 700m south east of King's Newnham.
2 An undated subrectangular enclosure shows on aerial photographs.
3 This site was examined during an archaeological evaluation in 1990 (WA 3961). It appears to date to the later Bronze ...
The site of an enclosure which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The enclosure was partially excavated and was found to be of Bronze Age or Iron Age date. It was situated 800m west of Wolston.
2 Undated but probably Prehistoric pit alignment shows on aerial photographs.
3 Linear features will be Bronze Age to Romano-British.
4 Mapped as part of National Mapping Programme. The north-south pit alignment ...
A Prehistoric linear feature, possibly a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The feature is located 1km south of Bretford.
1 Barrow at Smockington. This ‘barrow’ is shown on OS 1904 6″map as a depression. The site is under plough and there are no surface signs.
2 Barrow, now disappeared.
3 The ...
The possible site of a Bronze Age round barrow, a circular mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The site of the barrow is suggested by documentary evidence. It is situated 100m south of Smockington.
1 Barrow. From the area many flints, including a barbed and tanged arrowhead. May fall in Wolvey parish. Grid reference approximate.
2 This probably actually relates the Abbey Farm barrow 0.5km ...
The possible site of a round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. It is of Bronze Age date. The site is located 200m east of Gipsy Lane.
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 The site was first recorded by the Solihull Archaeological Group. An extensive mound shows up clearly above the crops. It is about 1.5-2m high and about 15-20m in extent ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably dates to the Bronze Age. It is visible as an earthwork.
1 Two beorg features, probably barrows rather than hills, are recorded on the W boundary of Oldberrow in a pre-Conquest Charter (see also PRN 5171). Each is described as Stanbeorge ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually concealing a human burial. The barrow probably dates to the Bronze Age. The site is located 500m south east of Poole's Wood.
1 Tumulus at ‘The Hill’
2 The area has recently been landscaped for a golf course, no tumulus was seen.
3 Dated to the Bronze Age.
The site of a possible Bronze Age round barrow. The site is now part of the Welcombe golf course, east of Stratford upon Avon.
2 Two pit alignments centred on the above grid reference appear to cross each other at a right angle.
3 Date narrowed down to between the late Bronze Age and the ...
Two Prehistoric pit alignments are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They appear to cross each other at right angles. They are situated 800m east of Bubbenhall.
2 Prehistoric pit alignment shows as crop mark.
3 Date revised to between the late Bronze Age and the late Iron Age.
A Prehistoric pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m south west of Rosegrove Farm.
2 A cluster of small subrectangular enclosures (PRN 4972) and linear features, including a length of pit alignment, show on air photographs.
3 Date revised to between the late Bronze Age ...
A Prehistoric pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It might be associated with a cluster of enclosures that lie nearby. The pit alignment is situated in the area of Lawford Heath.
1 The ‘ow’ in Brinklow may be derived from a tumulus.
2 In view of the place name and the fact that the road from the S is sited on the ...
The possible site of a round barrow, a mound of earth built to conceal a burial, which probably dates from the Bronze Age. The site lies in the area of Brinklow Castle.