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 Elements of a field system contemporary with the villa were evident in each of the four sub areas, apparetnly laid out without respect to the earlier enclosures. The ...
Ditches and gullies found during pipeline excavations indicate a field system of Romano-British date stetching south from the villa along the river.
1 Glasshouse Wood contains banks, ditches and lynchets, some of which are aligned on the Roman building (PRN 2594) and therefore are probably connected. Most of the earthworks lie to ...
A field system, comprising banks, ditches and lynchets that all survive as earthworks. The field system seems to be associated with a Roman building. The field system is located in Glasshouse Wood.
1 An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. ...
An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. Pottery analysis suggests that the main occupation phase was mid-1st - early 2nd-century AD.
1 A sub-circular enclosure shows on air photographs.
2 The field was planted with a potato crop, and nothing was visible on the surface.
3 Another cropmark at SP536762 may indicated the ...
An enclosure of Roman date may be part of a larger field system. The features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs and are situated 500m south east of the church at Clifton upon Dunsmore.
1 1965: Excavation in advance of bypass construction. One ditch proved to be V-shaped and the few scraps of pottery found were Roman. Further ditches also produced Roman pottery. The ...
During an excavation Roman features and finds were uncovered. A number of ditches may represent the remains of a field system. Three pits were also found and at least one of these was probably a well. The site was 800m east of the M40 Avon Bridge at Barford.
1 A series of ditches and gullies representing enclosures for stock management, domestic artefacts in their fills suggests their proximity the farmhouse. A wide range of pottery and ...
The site of a Roman farmstead was discovered during an archaeological excavation. Features relating to stock enclosures and a farm house were recorded. The site was located 500m west of Harborough Magna.
1 Archaeological evaluation found a small area of undisturbed features principally of early Roman date. Most of the site had been quarried for clay.
2 A small excavation was undertaken ...
Several ditches and gullies of Roman date were found during an excavation. They might represent the remains of a Roman field system. The features were found to the north west of Napton Hill.
1 Archaeological evaluation undertaken by Warwickshire Museum. Excavation of trench 1 revealed a steep-sided, flat-bottomed gully cut into the natural. It was aligned roughly WNW-ESE. In its base were three ...
A ditch, possible post holes and two pottery sherds dating to the Roman period were found during and excavation. It is possible that the ditch forms part of a known field system in the area. The site is located 200m north of Wellesbourne church.