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 Evaluation of a cropmark site in advance of quarrying was unable to clarify the status of trackways associated with a known Roman settlement, (SAM 162). Open area excavation revealed ...
Evidence of Iron Age/ Romano British settlement uncovered during a series of evaluations and excavations. The site is located 600m to the east of Marsh Farm, Salford Priors.
1 Rectilinear feature to the west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National Mapping Project (NMP) ...
Rectilinear feature to the south west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs.
1 Earthwork banks and a ditch seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping ...
Earthwork banks and a ditch can be seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle.
1 Archaeological observation of soil stripping on this site in 1998 (WA 8325) revealed the remains of a ditch running apx SE-NW but not on the exact alignment of the ...
The remains of a ditch, possibly of Medieval date, were found during an excavation. The ditch might be part of a larger Medieval field system at Cawston.
1 An archaeological evaluation (WA 8218) which took place in 1998 at this location revealed the remains of a Medieval field boundary ditch. The ditch contained fragments of skull which ...
The remains of a Medieval ditch, possibly a field boundary, were found during archaeological work at Alveston Manor Hotel.
1 One ‘D’ shaped single-ditched enclosure. Two part round-cornered enclosure. Twin ditches straight through site. Romano British pottery found. Site number 45.
2 Site 78 in survey
3 Perambulated. ...
Two enclosures, a trackway and parallel ditches are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Fragments of pottery found on the site dates to the Roman period. The site is located 600m south west of the cemetery, Barford.