Defence Estates, Durrington, Wiltshire - Report of Archaeological Field Evaluation

This report has not been peer reviewed.

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Authors

Wessex Archaeology

Abstract

Twelve trenches were excavated, varying between four and thirty metres long. Archaeological features were found in five of the trenches, in the north of the Site, two of these trenches were located in a paddock, the other three were located to the north of the trackway bisecting the field to the rear of the Red House. The recorded features consisted of pits and ditches primarily of Iron Age and Romano-British date. The same area of the Site was found to contain extensive deposits of colluvium, or hillwash, that was deposited between different periods of human activity on the Site. A sondage excavated at the end of Trench 4, using a machine, revealed that the hillwash in the west of the Site extended to a depth of 1.8 m below the present ground surface. A soil horizon, man-made or post-glacial, was observed at this depth. The trenches opened to the south of the track and within the utility yard yielded no
evidence for human activity on the Site other than post-medieval construction of the yard and associated buildings.

Subjects

Iron Age Structure, Romano-British Structure

Keywords

Dates

Published: 2006-09-01 14:34

Last Updated: 2026-03-23 13:34

License

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0

Additional Metadata

Country:
England