Grim’s Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wootton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire
An Archaeological Recording Action
For Empire Homes
by Steve Ford
Thames Valley Archaeological Services Ltd
Site Code SFW06/118
November 2006 Summary
Site name: Grim’s Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wootton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire
Grid reference: SP 41475 19140
Site activity: Recording Action
Date and duration of project: 16th October 2006
Project manager: Steve Ford
Site supervisor: Steve Ford
Site code: SFW 06/118
Summary of results: A small section of the Scheduled Ancient Monument (Grim’s Ditch) was recorded. No dating evidence was recovered.
Monuments identified: Ditch
Location and reference of archive: The archive is presently held at Thames Valley Archaeological Services, Reading and will be deposited at Oxfordshire County Museum Service in due course.
This report may be copied for bona fide research or planning purposes without the explicit permission of the copyright holder
Report edited/checked by: Steve Preston9 22.11.06
i Thames Valley Archaeological Services Ltd, 47–49 De Beauvoir Road, Reading RG1 5NR Tel. (0118) 926 0552; Fax (0118) 926 0553; email [email protected]; website : www.tvas.co.uk
Grim’s Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wootton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire An Archaeological Recording Action
by Steve Ford
Report 06/118
Introduction
This report documents the results of an archaeological Recording Action carried out at Starveall Farm, Wootton,
Woodstock, Oxfordshire (SP 41475 19140) (Fig. 1). The work was commissioned by Mr Brendan O’Brien of
Empire Homes Limited, The Long Barn, Oxford Road, Old Chalford, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, OX7 5QR.
The digging of a service trench for a new water pipe traversed a Scheduled Ancient Monument (SM28127/02) without scheduled monument consent and has caused slight damage to the monument.
The archive is presently held at Thames Valley Archaeological Services, Reading and will be deposited at
Oxfordshire County Museum in due course.
Location, topography and geology
The site is located on level ground on white limestone of the Cotswold Hills (BGS 1982). It lies at a height of c.
125m AOD.
Archaeological background
The site lies within an archaeologically rich area. Just to the north-west is Callow Hill Roman villa surrounded by a rectangular enclosure, and several round barrows, probably of Bronze Age date are also recorded. The site of Starveall Farm itself lies on the line of a component of the North Oxfordshire Grim’s Ditch complex which are linear earthworks of Iron Age date and are considered to be part of defensive and territorial features, possibly surrounding an extended oppidum (a proto-urban settlement) though the focus of the occupation is not known
(Miles 1986, 56). The earthworks form two concentric circuits, loosely enclosing an area of 60–70 sq km with an inner set of ditches enclosing an area of 12 sq km. The earthworks appear to have been built in open country with gaps where it is likely that woodland formerly stood. Where excavated, and dating evidence has been recovered, the earthworks have been shown to be of Iron Age date.
Three segments of the complex are present close to the site, generally aligned north - south and appearing to terminate at a small valley at the north (Pool Bottom) (Fig. 1). The pipe trench has traversed the central one of these ditches (Fig. 2). The earthwork is substantial and, before being levelled by cultivation, several elements
1
comprised a bank and ditch more than 20m across. The westernmost earthwork of the three to the north of
Starveall Farm still survives as a low earthwork despite arable cultivation whereas the central section forming the site is not now visible on the ground.
Objectives and methodology
The purpose of the Recording Action was to record the exposed section of this component of the Grim’s Ditch complex, examine the adjacent spoilheaps for finds and relate the observations to a detailed plot of aerial photographs.
Results
The ditch was located in the pipe trench as shown on Figure 2 and was shown to be 4.5m across and at least 1m deep with steep sides, but was not bottomed (Fig. 3). The pipe trench was only 0.6m wide making access and the photographic record difficult to produce. No finds were recovered from the ditch nor adjacent spoilheaps. No trace of a bank was observed. The ditch contained four fills variously containing a red silty clay with greater or less amounts of limestone. The upper ‘fill’ (50) is likely to represent a ploughsoil of relatively recent date.
Aerial photographs in the Oxfordshire Sites and Monuments Record were inspected comprising vertical photographs from the County Council collection and oblique photograph copies selected from the National
Monuments Record. The western and central ditch of the three ditches were plotted by hand onto a 1:10000 base, reproduced as Figure 3. The cropmarks are well represented for the northern and central sections of the two ditches but were poorly defined, if present at all, for the southern area. The plan of the Scheduled Area implies that the two ditches actually join (Fig. 3) but this was not clearly observed on the photographs inspected.
Finds
No finds were recovered.
Conclusion
The fieldwork has recorded a section of the Scheduled Ancient Monument known as the Grim’s Ditch complex damaged by the digging of a narrow water pipe trench. The full profile of the ditch was not exposed in the trench and no dating evidence was recovered. The recording was put into its local context by an inspection of aerial photographs for the site.
2
References BGS, 1982, British Geological Survey, 1:50000, Sheet 236, Solid and Drift Edition, Keyworth Miles, D, 1986, ‘The Iron Age’, in G Briggs, J Cook and T Rowley (eds), The Archaeology of the Oxford region, Oxford, 49-57
3 SITE
19000
SITE
18000
17000
16000
15000
SP41000 42000 43000 44000 SFW06/118 Grims Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wooton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, 2006 Archaeological Recording
Figure 1. Location of site within Wooton and Oxfordshire. Reproduced from Ordnance Survey Pathfinder SP41/51 1092 at 1:12500 Ordnance Survey Licence 100025880 Grims Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wooton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire 2006
N Callowhill Brake
19800
Scheduled Areas
19700
Cropmarks
19600
19500
19400
19300
19200 Starveall Farm Ditch
Pipe trench 19100
19000 Wootton Wood
SP41100 41200 41300 4140041500 41600 41700
0 100m
Figure 2. Detailed location of site showing cropmarks SFW06/118 Grims Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wooton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire 2006
W E
50
51
52 53 base of pipe trench (not bottomed)
01m
Figure 3. Section of ditch 53 e of p