Winterbourne Stoke 12 (Goddard) |
Hob Uid: 870446 | |
Location : Wiltshire Winterbourne Stoke
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Grid Ref : SU1017841816 |
Summary : A Bronze Age pond barrow survives as earthworks at the north-eastern end of the secondary alignment of the Winterbourne Stoke Crossroads round barrow cemetery (Monument Number 219525). It has an overall diameter of 29.5m and comprises a bank, 6m wide, which forms a complete ring around a circular hollow, 0.5m deep and 16m in diameter, with a floor circa 9m in diameter. A concrete block near the centre is marked 'A.M. No2' and was probably inserted by the military in the early 20th century. There is no record of any excavations, although it was included as barrow 20 by Sir Richard Colt Hoare (1812) and listed as Winterbourne Stoke 12 by Goddard (1913) and by Grinsell (1957). The round barrow was mapped from aerial photographs at a scale of 1:10,000 as part of the RCHME: Salisbury Plain Training Area NMP project and this mapping revised at a scale of 1:2500 for the English Heritage Stonehenge WHS Mapping Project. It was surveyed at a scale of 1:1000 in August 2009 as part of English Heritage's Stonehenge WHS Landscape Project. |
More information : `N' - SU 10174181; Winterbourne Stoke 12, a pond barrow with an overall diameter of 9ft. Colt Hoare's barrow 20. (1-2)
A pond barrow 31m in overall diameter. The bank has a maximum height of 0.4m, the central depression is 0.8m deep. (3)
Originally recorded as Winterbourne Stoke 12 by Goddard. (4)
The barrow is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs, and has been mapped by both RCHME's Salisbury Plain Training Area NMP and EH's Stonehenge WHS Mapping Project. (6-9)
The Bronze Age pond barrow referred to above (1-9) survives as earthworks, which were surveyed at a scale of 1 to 1000 in August 2009 as part of the Stonehenge WHS Landscape Project. The barrow has an overall diameter of 29.5m and comprises a bank, 6m wide, which forms a complete ring around a circular hollow, 0.5m deep and 16m in diameter, with a floor circa 9m in diameter. A concrete block near the centre is marked ¿A.M. No2¿ and was probably inserted by the military in the early 20th century. The north-west edge of the bank is cut by a modern fence, and partly flattened by a modern vehicle track. (10-11) |