SNN116852 - Fieldwork Report for Construction Integrated Recording at C30073 Greatworth Well, Northamptonshire
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Type | Report |
---|---|
Title | Fieldwork Report for Construction Integrated Recording at C30073 Greatworth Well, Northamptonshire |
Author/Originator | Daniel Domville |
Date/Year | 2025 |
Abstract/Summary
Headland Archaeology (UK) Ltd undertook Construction Integrated Recording (CIR) works on a stone-lined well within the Lower Greatworth cutting (CrID: C30073), located in Thorpe Mandeville in Northamptonshire, c. 10km east of Banbury (NGR: SP 56276 42525). The well, with the top of the shaft observed at a height of 166.86m AOD, was discovered during a previous phase of works and excavated to a depth of 160.50m AOD (5.3m below ground level) (1EW03-FUS_CNA-EV-REP-CS07_CL12-000018, 13). During the Construction Integrated Recording , the well was further excavated to a depth 158.4m AOD, the suggested impact depth of the planned construction works. To establish the maximum depth of the well, augering was undertaken until resistance was met at circa 1.4m below the previous excavation level. The well was subsequently excavated to 157.0m AOD, where no base was reached. Subsequent augering suggested that the well was likely to be at least 0.8m deeper still.The circular well structure was situated in a construction cut and was built from roughly hewn stones derived from the local geology. Roman pottery dating between AD 160 and 410 was found amongst the packing deposit situated between the well structure and the construction cut. The basal fill of the well contained a single sherd of Roman pottery and accumulated during- or shortly after the period that the well was in use. Situated on top of the basal fill was the roughly crouched skeleton of a young (18-25 years) adult male. The skeletal remains indicated that the deceased likely suffered from an infectious disease such as brucellosis or tuberculosis. The skeletal remains were overlain by the upper fill of the well, which mainly consisted of coarse stones. This fill was interpreted as a dumped layer and contained two Roman hobnails, sherds of pottery with a date of between AD 250 and 410 and a single sherd of Samian ware which belonged to a vessel with a date of between AD 140 and 230.
External Links (0)
Description
Digital copy only
Location
WNC Archives and Heritage Service HER Library
Referenced Monuments (1)
- 8828/1 Probable Iron Age/Roman settlement, Greatworth Fields (Monument)
Referenced Events (1)
- ENN111849 HS2: Greatworth Well, 2025 (Excavation) (Ref: Site code: C30073)
Record last edited
Jun 26 2025 3:27PM