227 THE WILTSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND NATURAL HISTORY MAGAZINE 
(All plans) 
8822 6| Chalk rubble 
2 
Flint nodules 
2 
QOS 
poe 
Burnt flint 
Fig. 3 Sections through features from Sites 1-4, Durrington Walls environs 
a knife and two retouched flakes. The animal bone, 
although small in quantity, included pig and cattle 
bones, as well as a fragment of jaw and tooth from a 
beaver. 
Three widely spaced features were identified to 
the east of the roundabout (Figure 2, Site 3). The 
first was pit 184, a substantial, bell-shaped feature 
0.57m deep with a diameter of 0.85m. It contained 
146 pieces of Neolithic struck flint (see Harding 
below), two sherds of pottery, and animal bone 
fragments including the remains of an antler pick. 
The pottery has no distinguishing characteristics, 
but is likely to be Neolithic, because of its 
association with so much worked flint of that date. 
Twenty metres to the east was a very shallow 
circular pit, 182, 0.65m in diameter, and filled with 
a silty clay (Figure 3). The feature was so ephemeral 
that interpretation is difficult, however, two flint 
