1 Crop marks seen on aerial photographs indicate a small multiphase settlement consisting of three rectilinear enclosures, numerous pits and a curvilinear boundary ditch, which partially defines the site. The ...
Settlement with pits, linear ditches and ditched enclosures are apparent on aerial photographs near South Hill Farm near Long Compton.
1 A ground flint celt, smoothed all over. Illustration by Bloxam.
2 This is the same axe that is said elswhere to have been found at Barton-on-the Heath (WA 3809).
3 ...
Find spot - a Neolithic stone axe. The exact location of the find spot is unknown, but it may have come from the area of Long Compton.
1 A large standing stone, 2.43m high and 1.52m wide, with a large semicircular notch on its E edge.
4 Various interpretations for the stone include: 1. Outlier of the stone ...
The King Stone is a standing stone dating from between the Early Neolithic and the Late Bronze Age periods. It is located 850m south of The Hollows.
1 The long mound just N of the King Stone was thought by Stukeley and many others (notably Crawford) to be a long barrow. Ravenhill’s excavation appeared to suggest that ...
The site of a possible barrow which dates to between the Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age periods. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated 850m south of The Hollows.
1 The existence of this monument is known largely from a set of antiquarian drawings preserved in the Gough collection. It was recorded by Stukeley who described it as being ...
The site of a round barrow which dated from between the Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age periods. It is known through documentary evidence and was situated 800m south of The Hollows.
1 Stukeley described a barrow to the E of the King Stone, crossed by a dry-stone wall, which had stonework on its E side. Site 5, a small ring ditch, ...
The site of a ring ditch dating from between the Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age periods. It is situated 800m south east of The Hollows and it is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs.