1, 2 A small group of Roman pottery, dating to 2nd to 3rd century AD, were recovered from the site. None of these were highly abraded suggesting they have been ...
A small group of unabraded Roman pottery from this site and from an earlier site from 1992, suggests Roman activity at this location.
1 Pits and ditches containing a small pottery assemblage were recorded during evaluative archaeological fieldwork. These features indicate the remains of a small settlement, probably a small farmstead in proximity ...
Pits and ditches containing a small pottery assemblage were recorded during evaluative archaeological fieldwork. These features indicate the remains of a small settlement, probably a small farmstead in proximity to the Fosse Way.
1 A series of enclosures, first recorded through geophysical survey, were subsequently evaluated by trial trenching. The trenching recorded a series of structures, pits, gullies and boundary features related ...
A series of enclosures, first recorded through geophysical survey, were subsequently evaluated by trial trenching. The trenching recorded a series of structures, pits, gullies and boundary features related to a Romano-British farmstead.
1 Heavy concentrations of pottery show that a line of farmsteads lay along the 125m contour near the border between Admington and Lark Stoke.
Findspot - scatters of Roman pottery suggest that several farmsteads may have existed in the area between Admington and Lark Stoke.