Of the surviving monuments, Barrow A is located to the north of the former works, on the parish boundary between Wyville cum Hungerton and Little Ponton and Stroxton.
In Barrow J he found an intact main burial chamber containing a crushed red collared urn, decorated with cord impressions, inverted over burned bone.
He also found numerous secondary cremations and stone tools, leading him to classify the builders as the "Yorkshire Food Vessel Culture" in the terminology of the time.
Examination of topsoil removed from the destroyed portion of the site yielded fragments of Roman Samian and grey ware pottery.
[4] Fieldwalking of the area west of Barrow A in the 1960s and 70s also turned up a large scatter of stone tools,[11] and a child's bronze bracelet dated to the Roman era.