1 This site shows a large deep pit which seems to be man made. It may well have been a quarry, although there is no evidence for this from ...
The possible site of a quarry of unknown date. It is visible as a large pit. The site is located 500m west of Wolston.
1 The 1905 Ordnance Survey map of the area shows in detail a series of depressions and hollows around this point, this is probably the result of quarrying.
2 Quarrying likely ...
Several quarry pits are visible as earthworks. They may date to the Imperial period or earlier. They are situated 1km east of Knightlow Hill.
1 Three flint flakes, one with a Middle/Late Bronze Age cremation. In Coventry Museum.
2 See MWA3414 for ring ditches.
3 Dating given as Middle Bronze Age.
The site of a cremation burial dating to the Bronze Age. The burial was found 1km east of Wolston.
1 Two pits and a group of linear banks seen on aerial photographs to the south of Marston mill were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. ...
Two pits and a group of linear banks can be seen on aerial photographs to the south of Marston Mill.
1 Gravel pit marked on 1886 map.
The site of a pit from which gravel was extracted during the Imperial period. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, and was situated 100m northwest of the War Memorial, Wolston.
1 Clay pit SW of Barn Cottage Farm marked on 1886 map.
The site of a clay pit from which clay was extracted during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.