1 The wind pump at Cock Bevington was blown down in a gale in 1971. The remains are behind Bevington Hall.
2 There is no trace of this wind ...
The site of a wind pump, possibly of Medieval date. It is situated 500m north west of Iron Cross.
1 Aerial Photograph
2 A double ditched rectangular enclosure about 60m x 30m with a narrow entrance through both ditches on the SE. Inside the enclosure are two adjoining enclosures – ...
The possible site of a settlement. Enclosures, pits, ditches, and a possible field system are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Its date is uncertain, but it could be Iron Age. The features are situated 500m north west of the church at Salford Priors.
1 Enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. Morphologically this site is probably a settlement of Roman date.
2 The site was fieldwalked in October 1986 and a very sparse ...
A settlement that is visible as a series of cropmarks on aerial photographs. It dates to the Roman period. During an excavation enclosures and trackways were discovered and several gullies dating to the Iron Age. It is situated 900m north of Salford Priors.
2 Linear features show as crop marks.
3 Features mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
4 Possibly a trackway and part of an enclosure.
Several linear features, a possible enclosure and trackway are visible as a crop marks on aerial photographs. They are undated and are located 900m north west of Salford Priors.
2 Linear features and possible enclosure show on air photographs.
3 The linear features, possibly parts of three seperate enclosures, visible on air photographs were mapped as part of the ...
A linear feature and a series of possible enclosures of unknown date. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They lie 400m south east of Rushford.
2 Linear features and possible trackways show on air photographs.
Linear features and possible trackways appear as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date. The features are located 200m west of Iron Cross.
2 Linear features show S and SW of an undated settlement enclosure (PRN 1497). These linear features may represent part of a field system. A possible scatter lies alongside one ...
A complex of curvilinear cropmarks, circular enclosures and pits visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. This site is located 300m west of Salford Priors.
2 Rectangular enclosures and a linear feature can be identified on aerial photographs.
3 Rectangular enclosures and a linear feature identified on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English ...
An undated rectangular enclosure and a linear feature are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 450m south west of Rushford.
2 Two possible linear cropmarks have been identified from an air photograph. These may be non-archaeological.
3 The cropmarks look as though they are the result of recent agricultural practice
A possible linear feature which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is of unknown date and is located 750m south east of Iron Cross.
2 A possible linear cropmark has been identified from an air photograph.
3 Linear cropmark identified from an air photograph mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
A possible, undated, linear feature which is visible as a cropmark. It is located 250m north east of Iron Cross.
1 The aerial photographs (e.g. SP0650/17) available to the English Heritage National Mapping Project show crop marks that are probably of geological origin but none that support the Summary for ...
A linear feature and a rectangular enclosure, both undated, are visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. They are located 350m west of Abbot's Salford.