1 Members of the National Vegetable Research Station at Wellesbourne have, over the past five or six years, found barbed and tanged and leaf-shaped arrowheads and scrapers in the fields ...
Findspot - flint implements, including scrapers and arrowheads (both leaf and barbed & tanged), dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age, were found 1km north east of Charlecote.
3 A ring ditch with a possible central pit shows on aerial photographs.
4 Ring ditch and cursus on gravel terrace of north of the River Dene, close to confluence with ...
A ring ditch with a possible central pit, dating between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photography. The site is located 500m east of the church, Charlecote.
1 Over half a ring ditch excavated in advance of gravel extraction. An unbroken ring ditch enclosed an area 12m in diameter. Excavated part revealed seven straight sections and calculations ...
An excavation of a round barrow dating to the Neolithic period uncovered a ring ditch and a human burial with a flint knife. The site is located 850m south of the church, Wasperton.
3 Two side ditches of a possible cursus monument show on air photos. The side ditches are very straight, although it is not certain that this is a cursus monument.
4 ...
Two linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They may be the side ditches of a possible cursus, which dates to the Neolithic period, though this has not been proven. The site is located 550m east of the church, Charlecote.
1 Small elongated rectangular enclosure with elliptical ends and traces of two entrances, orientated N-S.
2 This is a small cursus type enclosure which was investigated by Mrs P M Christie ...
A rectangular enclosure, ditches and post holes were found during an archaeological excavation. The site has been interpreted as a long barrow, cursus or a mortuary enclosure. The site appears to date to the Neolithic period and is located 1.3km north of Charlecote.
1 A ring ditch shows on air photographs.
2 Complete excavation by W Ford in 1969 exposed an unbroken enclosing ditch with a diameter of 22m between the internal banks. The ...
Excavation of a ring ditch shown on aerial photographs uncovered evidence to suggest this was a Bronze Age barrow. A Roman pit was found to the west of the ditch. The site is 400m east of Hail End Bridge, Charlecote.
1 2 A flint scatter from the Neolithic and Bronze Age was recorded during fieldwalking at Middle Hunscote Farm. Subsequent trial trenching recorded a substantial earlier Neolithic flint assemblage. No ...
A flint scatter from the Neolithic and Bronze Age was recorded during evaluation at Middle Hunscote Farm. A number of ditches and pits from the Bronze Age were also recorded.
1 During a water main excavation a Neolithic leaf-shaped arrowhead and an early Bronze Age flint scraper were found.
Findspot - a leaf-shaped arrowhead, dating to the Neolithic period, and an early Bronze Age flint scraper, were found 1.4km north east of the church, Charlecote.
1 During excavations of a water main, two flint objects were found, one is clearly a Neolithic/Bronze Age tool.
Findspot - two flint objects dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age, were found 1.3km north east of the church, Charlecote.
1 Neolithic/Bronze Age flint struck from prepared core found in 1987. Retouched along one edge for use as a knife.
2 One broken blade and 3 flakes found in 1987. ...
Findspot - a flint struck from a core, a broken blade and three flakes dating to the Prehistoric period were found 700m south east of the church, Wasperton.