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An Iron-Age Site near Radley, Berks.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2012
Extract
In 1928 by courteous permission of Mr. Badcock, the owner, the Oxford University Archaeological Society, under the supervision of Mr. R. T. Lattey, was able to examine a site in a field bounded on the west by the road leading from Radley village to Abingdon and on the south by a second road leading eastwards towards Radley station. There, on the wall of a disused gravelpit, holes filled with earth had produced evidence of human occupation. Exploration of some of these resulted in the discovery of a series of trenches, the relation of which to one another could not be exactly determined owing to the limited area available for investigation. One piece of trench ran with a somewhat north-easterly trend up to the northern edge of the field, with a recessed pit about 4½ ft. across at one point, while a second longer stretch, after running in a north-westerly direction for a few yards, turned almost at right angles towards the south-west, and some distance farther on, at the point where the excavations had to cease, appeared to be bending southwards.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1931
References
page 399 note 1 Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society, x, 178 ff., pl. 1.
page 399 note 2 Arch. lxi, pl. LVI.
page 400 note 1 A. Bulleid and H. St. George Gray, Glastonbury Lake Village, i, 276, Type 3.
page 404 note 1 Wytham, Berks.; Bampton, Stanlake, and Yarnton, Oxon.; vases or sherds in the Ashmolean Museum.