Steep Down (3 miles North East of Worthing). 
Chanctonbury Ring (6 miles North of Worthing). 
Planted some 80 years ago with the well-known clump of 
beech trees. Quantities of broken shards of pottery can be 
found here, some undoubtedly Roman (including fragments 
of Roman tiles). Others seem to be pre-Roman. 
The Poor Man’s Wall (near the Devil’s Dyke. 
Wolstonbury (6 miles North of Brighton. towards 
Hurstpierpoint). The most Northerly point of the South 
Downs, east of Arundel. 
Ditchling Beacon (almost due North of Hollingbury 
Camp, on the north west of the Downs). It is the highest 
point of Sussex. 
Mount Caburn (at the South Eastern corner of the 
out-lying mass of the Downs between Lewes and Glynde.) 
Whitehawk Down. The Camp here is just South of 
the Grand Stand, but it has been almost entirely obliterated 
in recent years, having been levelled in connection with 
alterations to the Race Course. 
Mount Harry, the site of the Battle of Lewes, in the 
Baron’s War, can aiso be seen from this Camp over 
Stanmer Park. 
It is hoped that excavations will be undertaken here in 
the course of time, which may result in discoveries as inter- 
esting as those at High Down or Cissbury, 
