1 A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School. It was probably a drainage ditch or field boundary similar ...
A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School.
1 Ditch 1001 probably represented a field boundary ditch, and another ditch may have been part of the same Romano British field system.
2There was a scatter of residual Roman pottery ...
Romano-British field boundaries found during excavation in the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle. These were possibly part of a larger field system aligned on Ryknild Street.
2 Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, show as crop marks.
3 During evaluation in 1995 to the north, a single gully was observed perpendicular to this cropmark, and it is suggested ...
Linear features of unknown date, possibly forming an enclosure, are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 100m south of Alcester Hospital. Nearby, a possible related feature was recorded in an archaeological evaluation suggesting that this cropmark might be part of a ridge and furrow field system.
1 The single archaeological feature found within the trench was visible as a 4m length of gully aligned north-east to south-west. Possibly represents the bottom of a field ...
A gully of unknown date was found in Saxon Close, Stratford upon Avon. It might represent a field boundary.
1 Two medieval furrow markings uncovered during observation of ground works for a new teaching block.
2 A number of medieval furrows running roughly east-west across the site were recorded during ...
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation located 100m west of the ruins of Alcester Abbey.
1 An archaeological evaluation at St Benedict’s R.C. High School recorded a shallow ditch from which the only find was a fragment of roof tile of medieval or early post ...
A shallow gully was recorded in one of the evaluation trenches, likely to be associated with ridge and furrow.
1 Excavation carried out in June 1993 in advance of the construction of the new bedroom block at the Hotel. To the E of Kings Court lies an extensive ...
Evidence of the remains of Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation was found during archaeological work at Kings Court Hotel. Medieval pottery was also found.