1 10m+ long ditch, 0.9m wide and 0.23m deep. Single fill contained a single piece of later Roman colour-coated beaker. The pottery may have been residual.
Ditch found during an excavation. A single sherd of Romano-British pottery was recovered from it.
1 Archaeological observation of topsoil stripping and the digging of foundation trenches revealed no traces of Medieval settlement. A single sherd of Romano-British pottery was recovered from the subsoil.
Findspot - a single fragment of Roman pottery was found during archaeological work north of Hillside.
1 Archaeological evaluation found a small area of undisturbed features principally of early Roman date. Most of the site had been quarried for clay.
2 A small excavation was undertaken ...
Several ditches and gullies of Roman date were found during an excavation. They might represent the remains of a Roman field system. The features were found to the north west of Napton Hill.
1 A Romano British grey rim sherd was picked up near Napton Marina.
2 There is a discrepancy between the text and map (fig 1) concerning the location of the find ...
Findspot - a fragment of Roman pottery was found to the west of Napton Reservoir.
1 Romano British grey ware has also been picked up in the brick-earth quarry, under the windmill.
Findspot - fragments of Roman pottery were found 300m west of Napton Hill.
1 Two bodysherds of Romano British grey ware picked up in Wood Field.
Findspot - two fragments of pottery of Roman date were found to the north west of Hillside, Napton on the Hill.
1 The earliest evidence on the site was a ditch crossing the excavation which contained a quantity of Romano-British pottery. This was U-shaped, about 0.5m wide and 0.4m deep, running ...
Findspot - various finds of Roman date, including pottery, burnt brick and bone was found during the excavation of a Medieval building. The finds suggest that this may have been an industrial site during the Roman period. The finds came from the area of Chapel Green.