2 Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, show on aerial photographs as crop marks.
3 Linear crop marks showing on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National ...
Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date and are situated 200m northwest of Bodymoor Heath Bridge.
2 A system of subrectangular enclosures attached to a linear ditch shows on aerial photographs. This is overlain by a later deerpark.
3 Ditches described above mapped as part of English ...
Enclosures and linear features that are of unknown date. They are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs and are situated 700m north of Middleton Hall. Possibly part of a prehistoric field system.
1 On the Tithe Award Map of 1849, there were two houses and eleven cottages in Walcote. Most of these have now disappeared and there are now only three occupied ...
The site of a shrunken village at Walcote of Medieval to Imperial date. The tithe award map of 1849 shows buildings that no longer exist. They were situated in the area of Lower Green.
1 Glasshouse Wood contains banks, ditches and lynchets, some of which are aligned on the Roman building (PRN 2594) and therefore are probably connected. Most of the earthworks lie to ...
A field system, comprising banks, ditches and lynchets that all survive as earthworks. The field system seems to be associated with a Roman building. The field system is located in Glasshouse Wood.
2 An irregular D-shaped enclosure shows on aerial photographs. Linear features may also indicate a field system in association with the enclosure.
3 Fieldwork on the site produced Medieval pottery (PRN ...
An enclosure and linear cropmarks of unknown date, which may be the remains of a field system. Medieval pottery may provide evidence of a settlement nearby. The enclosure and linear cropmarks lie 200m south of Hall End Farm.
1 Banks and ditches evident on aerial photographs to the south of Whichford were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
The banks and ditches form rectangular enclosures ...
Banks and ditches are evident on aerial photographs to the south of Whichford.
1 Earthworks in the form of rectangular banks and linear dirtches visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The banks and ...
Earthworks in the form of rectangular banks and linear dirtches visible on aerial photographs may be the remains of a shrunken village. Features are located at the rear (east) of the properties on the High Street, Ryton on Dunsmore.
1 2 Cropmarks of an enclosure and a linear feature comprising two parallel ditches have been plotted from air photographs.
34 Also shows on aerial photographs taken in 1996, described on ...
An enclosure and a linear feature are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Neither their function or the period they date to is known although this may be a banjo enclosure dating to the later prehistoric period (probably Iron Age). They are located 200m south of the church, Stockton.