By the Rev. E. H. Goddard. 163 



9. Large bowl-shaped barrow, just N. of Wansdyke at Red Shore, 

 with ditch, several sarsen stones round the S. end of it. Not 

 opened. O.M. 35 NW. ; Smith p. 184. XII. H. viii. m. 



At Knap Hill Camp on point of down E. of Walker's Hill 2 small 

 barrows, within the camp and one outside on W. [10 — 10b.] 

 O.M. 35. SW. 



lO. Small bowl- shaped barrow inside rampart on W. side, opened by 

 Thurnam (No. 21), 2ft. high with slight ditch. Circular cist in 

 centre 2ft. deep X 2ft. diam., containing ashes and burnt bones 

 only. Animals' bones in the body of the mound. A. W. II. 11, 12 ; 

 W.A.M, vi. 327 ; xxxvii. 43 ; Smith p. 184. XII. I. viii. c. 



[lOa.] The barrow inside rampart on E. side has been entirely dug 

 away by flint diggers (1908). Smith p. 184. XII. I viii. d. Not 

 on OM. 



[lOb.] Low bowl-shaped barrow with ditch outside camp on W. 

 Opened by Thurnam (No. 20). Nothing but animals' bones 

 found. Perhaps not a barrow. Smith p. 184. XII. I. viii. e ; 

 W. A. M. xxxvii. 53. Not on 0. M. 



[10c] A mound just outside N.W. corner of Knap Hill Camp, opened 

 by B. H. Cunnington, 1908, nothing found but a skeleton just 

 below the turf . 1 a barrow. W. A . M. xxxvii. 58. Not on O.M. 



Earthworks. 



Knap Hill Camp, excavated by B. H. k Mrs. Cunnington 1908, 1909. 

 Single rampart and ditch of no great strength round about half 

 of the circuit, the remainder facing the precipitous descent to 

 Pewsey Vale shows little or no evidence of defence, except slight 

 rampart and ditch at S.E. corner. The ditch on N.W. side is not 

 continuous but cut up into a number of sections of varying length by 

 gangways of undisturbed chalk each 18ft. wide, corresponding with 

 gaps in the rampart. What was the object of this unique arrangement 

 does not appear. Pottery on floor of ditch shows that the old camp 

 was made in the Bronze Age if not in Neolithic times, and the ditch 

 had silted up before the triangular " plateau enclosure " was added 

 to the N.E. end of the camp in the Late Celtic period. This probably 

 continued in occupation throughout the Roman period. Roman pottery, 

 T-shaped fireplace, &c. It was occupied again in the 17th century. 

 Objects found in Devizes Museum. O.M. 35 SW. ; A. W. II. 11 ; 

 W.A.M. xxxvii. 42 figs. & plans. 



A slight bank not 1ft. high leaves camp on S. side and descends the 

 most precipitous part of the escarpment into Pewsey Vale, called 

 " The Devil's Trackway." For what purpose ? Too steep for path. 

 W.A.M. xxxvii. 46. 



A small square enclosure N. of Walker's Hill Long Barrow and just W. 

 of New Town. O.M. 35 NW. Shown but not numbered, Smith XII. 

 H. viii. 



