carried out in 1965 1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for an Iron Age settlement. This was a rectangular enclosure 11.6m by 9.7m with an entrance to the S. Ten features ...
A possible settlement showed up on aerial photographs. An Iron Age enclosure was discovered during an excavation. A ditch and a pit, both containing fragments of pottery, were also found. The site is east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 Five pits within the barrow were intrusive and produced Iron Age pottery and quern stones.
1 /Excav report /Oswald A /1966 /TBAS /Vol 83 /p 1-64 /WMB /
2 ...
The excavation of five pits, containing pottery and quern stones of Iron Age date. The pits had been cut into an earlier feature, probably a hengi-form barrow. The site is 200m south of Barford Wood.
1 1965: Excavation of a rectangular enclosure of Iron Age date with evidence of four recuts of the same ditch. The enclosure was a rough rectangle 11.6m by 16.4m with ...
A rectangular enclosure, along with hearth stones, charcoal and pottery, was found during an excavation. The enclosure and pottery dated to the Iron Age period and suggest that the site may have been a settlement. It was located 200m north west of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Ditch located during construction of Warwick bypass. This produced pot of Bronze Age ‘domestic’ type.
A ditch and fragments of Bronze Age pottery were found during an excavation. The site was located 250m south east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
2 Small irregular enclosure shows on air photographs.
3 Site no 83 in survey.
4 In addition to the double pit alignment (MWA705) there is a five-sided enclosure measuring 27m N-S by ...
A settlement dating to the Iron Age was found during an excavation. Round houses, ditches and a double pit alignment were found within an enclosure. The site is located 300m south east of Barford Wood.
1 Three distinct groups of pits and/or postholes were located in Area B dating to the Middle-Late Iron Age.
Area of Middle-Late Iron Age Pits and Postholes from Area 'B' uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 Three distinct groups of pits and an L-shaped ditch were located in and around Area A dating to the Middle-Late Iron Age.
One of the pits (pit 32) contained a ...
Area of Middle-Late Iron Age Pits and L-shaped ditch from trial trenching and area excavation (Area 'A') uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 An open settlement consisting of three Iron Age round houses of post hole construction, found close to the cursus terminal (MWA 719) in 1972.
2 This site has now been ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Iron Age. The settlement consisted of three round houses of post hole construction. It was located 750m north east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
2 Linear features show on air photographs intersecting an Iron Age enclosure (PRN 700).
3 1988: Excavation undertaken in advance of M40 construction should demonstrate the chronological relationship between the settlement ...
Linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs and are possibly of Iron Age date. They may have been associated with a palisade feature. They were located 800m west of Half Moon Plantation.
1 Aerial photograph.
2 Enclosure and linear features (PRN 6299) show on air photographs. Possibly of Iron Age date.
3 Field work produced one potsherd of possible Iron Age (actually Roman) ...
Cropmarks on aerial photographs and the results of an excavation show that there was an Iron Age settlement west of the Half Moon Plantation, under what is now the M40.
1 One ‘D’ shaped single-ditched enclosure. Two part round-cornered enclosure. Twin ditches straight through site. Romano British pottery found. Site number 45.
2 Site 78 in survey
3 Perambulated. ...
Two enclosures, a trackway and parallel ditches are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Fragments of pottery found on the site dates to the Roman period. The site is located 600m south west of the cemetery, Barford.
1 Aerial photographs.
2 Double pit alignment cutting off a peninsular in a bend of the River Avon. A number of enclosures, one of which is double ditched, can be ...
A double pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The pit alignment cuts off a peninsular in a bend of the River Avon near Barford Sheds. The site was excavated in 1972 and showed that the alignment is 123m in length and is Prehistoric in date.