1 No site was positively identified. However, a large amount of Post-Medieval and modern pottery was recovered from the hill-top, possibly the result of a midden heap or rubbish pits. ...
Two possible quarries of unknown date situated 300m east of Highdown Hill Plantation. Sherds of Roman and Medieval pottery were also found at this location.
1 No site identified. Soil/ crop marks and contours indicate a quarry. Two fragments of Roman pottery could indicate Roman cultivation. Also fragments of modern pottery, tile, ...
A possible quarry of unknown date is situated 300m south east of Highdown Hill Plantation. Sherds of Roman pottery were also found in this location.
1 Seven Roman sherds. Post-medieval pottery more prevalent than modern, no Medieval sherds. 8 possible worked flints. A small quarry or marl pit existed to the N of the field ...
A possible quarry of unknown date was found 600m south east of Highdown Hill Plantation. Sherds of Roman and Post-Medieval pottery were also found in this location as were fragments of worked flint.
1 Flints and Roman sherds indicate cultivation at some level, also 6 Medieval sherds. Much post-Medieval material could indicate a midden, or housing in, or near, the field – ...
Several quarry pits of unknown date were found at this location as were sherds of Roman, Medieval and Post-Medieval pottery. The site is located 700m north west of Highdown Hill Plantation.
1 A scatter of Modern brick, tile and slate may indicate a building or dumping of occupation material in a hollow. The field also contains a marl pit and the ...
A scatter of modern building debris suggests that the material may have been dumped into an earlier hollow or quarry of unknown date. It is located 800m north west of Tatchbrook Mallory.
‘Old Stone Pit’ (two close together) are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
Two quarries are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 as 'Old Stone Pits' and may have been worked in the earlier Imperial period. They were located west of Oakley Wood.