[1] Hazleton North was excavated over several years, from 1979 to 1982, under the direction of Alan Saville.
In 2020 one of the Hazleton North burial chambers, built of limestone orthostats, was reconstructed as a new display at Corinium Museum in Cirencester.
[3] In 2021, archaeologists from the universities of Newcastle, Central Lancashire, Exeter and York, and geneticists from the universities of Harvard, Vienna, and the Basque country published the results of the examination of the bones and teeth of 35 people buried in Hazleton North.
The research team discovered that 27 were biological relatives from five continuous generations of a single extended family.
[4][5][6][7] This article relating to archaeology in the United Kingdom is a stub.