1 Observation of topsoil stripping in February-March 1994 on behalf of Alfred McAlpine construction Ltd revealed the presence of a Romano-British rural settlement covering c.3.5ha. The settlement consisted of ...
Evidence of a Romano-British Rural Settlement found at Abbots Salford Quarry. The decision was made to exclude the site from extraction and it was subsequently reburied.
1 In the field known as the Vineyard, adjoining the church on the west, are some mounds and ditches which have often been supposed to mark the foundations of ...
A series of earthworks and parchmarks which indicate the site of a moated manor site and related building are visible on Google Earth and LiDAR imagery. Previously interpreted as a quarry site.
2 Faint enclosures show on aerial photographs. These marks represent the site of a gravel quarry which is marked on an old OS map and has since been ploughed over.
3 ...
The site of a quarry which appears as a cropmark on aerial photographs and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. It is undated and is located 400m west of Broom.
1 A rectangular ditch and a pit of similar shape seen on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The ditch, which appears ...
A rectangular ditch and a pit of similar shape can be seen on aerial photographs 400m south of Kingley Farm.
1 Chapel Oad garden, Salford Priors, Stratford.
Lovie reports pleasure grounds with walks; kitchen garden; paddocks with clumps and boundary planting.
State unknown as Lovie did not visit.
Pleasure grounds; kitchen garden; paddocks.
1 An open area excavation, Area E, carried out in advance of the A435 Norton Lenchwick Bypass revealed Neolithic activity. The later Neolithic was represented by at least one ...
Excavation in advance of road development, uncovered signs of Neolithic activity, including pits, cremation pits, worked flint and polished stone axes. The site is to the northwest of Broom.
1 Trench 5 of the evaluation in advance of the building of the A435 Norton-Lenchwick Bypass revealed a pit which contained 499 sherds of Bronze Age pottery. This is an ...
Excavation in advance of road development uncovered Bronze Age pits, pottery, a small ring ditch containing a funeral pyre, and fragments of bronze cauldrons. The site was 300m north west of the weir at Broom.