1 Excavated 1972-3. A C-shaped enclosure at the end of the cursus (MWA719) was totally excavated. It was termed the ‘mortuary enclosure’ on typological grounds; there was in fact no ...
The site of a C-shaped enclosure containing pits and post holes. It may have been a Neolithic mortuary enclosure. The site is 1km north east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
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 Excavation of a pit which produced sherds of late Neolithic Fengate Ware.
A pit was excavated east of Bushey Hill, Barford. It contained fragments of Neolithic pottery.
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 produced evidence for four ditched enclosures. Phases 1-3 were only partly uncovered. Phase 3 was a subrectangular enclosure with a gully which probably acted as a bedding ...
An excavation at this site uncovered evidence of ditched enclosures that suggested four phases of occupation. The features showed up on aerial photographs. Features and finds were of probable Neolithic date. The site was 300m north east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for an Iron Age settlement (PRN 5588) and a Neolithic pit. The pit produced a sherd of Neolithic Fengate Ware.
A Neolithic pit, which contained a sherd of pottery, was found during an excavation. The site was 200m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation of a ‘hair pin’ of pits, 80m long. Excavation was small-scale and revealed a few features, but was inconclusive. Of seven pits only one produced a find ...
During an excavation several pits were found. The dating of these pits was inconclusive. The site is 250m north east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Trench cut across a group of pits. Four small pits with associated stakeholes, but no finds. Also a number of large pits. The excavator considered these pits to ...
An excavation was undertaken where pits were visible on aerial photographs. There were no finds to date these features but they may have been Neolithic. The site was 250m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Mechanical sections were cut across a group of large pits. Before excavation it had been suggested that they were tree pits. The pits actually appeared to be archaeological ...
An excavation was undertaken where pits were visible on aerial photographs. Ditches, post holes and smaller pits were found. There was no firm dating evidence, but the features may have been Neolithic. The site was 400m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation in advance of bypass construction. One ditch proved to be V-shaped and the few scraps of pottery found were Roman. Further ditches also produced Roman pottery. The ...
During an excavation Roman features and finds were uncovered. A number of ditches may represent the remains of a field system. Three pits were also found and at least one of these was probably a well. The site was 800m east of the M40 Avon Bridge at Barford.
1 1965: Dragline during construction of Warwick bypass located a small pit about 1.2m across which was filled with charcoal and pot boilers.
A small undated pit was discovered during an excavation. The site was 300m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
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 A pit with 36 pottery sherds dating to the late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age period was discovered in area ‘B’ from excavation in advance of the Barford Bypass.
A pit with 36 pottery sherds dating to the late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age period was 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 A pit with Roman sherds of pottery was found in Area F in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
Romano-British Pit uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 The site was excavated by Warwick Museum in advance of the building of the M40 motorway and is now totally destroyed. Finds included Beaker fragments, rare in Warwickshire, and ...
A boundary ditch, thought to be Bronze Age in date, was discovered during an excavation. Finds from the site included fragments of early Bronze Age pottery. The site now lies under the M40.
1 Site is one element in a complex of cropmarks including enclosures and pits.
2 Air photos show the site as a double ring ditch with a faint possible ditch between ...
Aerial photographs showed a complex of cropmarks including a double ring ditch and pits. Excavation uncovered evidence of cremations and a probably hengi-form barrow of Neolithic and Bronze Age date. The site was under the M40 at Barford.