1 Appears to be a small oval enclosure with entrances on the north and south sides.
2 Aerial photograph shows this feature. There is no obvious explanation for this feature which ...
A small enclosure of unknown date is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is situated 100m south of Maxtoke Lane, Coleshill.
2 Three sides of a banked and ditched enclosure show on aerial photographs. On the SW the enclosure appears to be cut by a small subrectangular enclosure. To the SE ...
An enclosure, possible of medieval date, is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is located 300m north of Coleshill Hall Farm.
1 During M42 survey a small area of earthworks located.
An enclosure of unknown date was visible as an earthwork. It was situated 500m west of Coleshill Bridge.
1 An evaluation of land to the south of known Romano British settlement uncovered evidence of activity including a large pit or ditch, other rubbish pits with fill containing pottery ...
The site of Romano British roadside settlement in the Ennersdale Road area of Coleshill.
1 Two large rubbish pits encountered in the south western part of the site had destroyed earlier archaeological layers. The largest was 20m in diameter and 3m deep.
Modern rubbish pits were uncovered during a site excavation connected with the Birmingham Northern Relief Road project.
1 A substantial ditch seen as a cropmark lies across the site aligned NNE-SSW with a terminus toward the northern margin of the site. Width and depth vary. Ditch ...
A ditch, possibly of Medieval date, was uncovered during archaeological work connected with the Birmingham Northern Relief Road project.
1 A field drain cuts the upper fills of a larger drainage ditch (WA 9122). Site stratigraphy suggests a Post Medieval date for this feature.
A possible Post Medieval field drain was uncovered during archaeological work connected with the Birmingham Northern Relief Road project.
1 An archaeological evaluation recovered evidence for occupation between the 12th and 14th centuries. The evidence was suggestive of property boundaries rather than settlement features; however domestic activity is ...
A possible settlement dating to the Medieval or Post-Medieval period. The site is located 500m south west of Hawkeswell Farm.