NHER 61106 (Monument record) - Probable post-medieval extraction pit on Cranwich Heath

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Summary

A probable post-medieval extraction pit was identified as an earthwork during a field visit. It is depicted on a late-19th century map, and is also visible as an earthwork on visualised lidar data. As the lidar survey was flown relatively recently, it is probable that the earthwork still survives.

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Location

Map sheet TL79SE
Civil Parish CRANWICH, BRECKLAND, NORFOLK

Map

October 2014. Breaking New Ground field visit. HA 39.
A roughly circular hollow with a diameter of about 35m. It is visible on the First Edition Ordnanec Survey map (S1).
It may have been excavated as a quarry for sand and gravel or a marl pit for chalk.
D. Robertson (HES), 27 July 2015.

May 2020. Breckland National Mapping Programme.
The pit described above is visible as an earthwork on visualised lidar data (S2). It is also visible on aerial photographs (S3, for example). As suggested above, it is probably a post-medieval extraction pit. As the lidar survey was flown relatively recently, it is probable that the earthwork still survives.
The mapped extent of this pit has been refined [1].
S. Tremlett (Norfolk Historic Environment Service), 8 May 2020.

  • <S1> Map: Ordnance Survey. 1883. Ordnance Survey 6 inch map.
  • <S2>XY LIDAR Airborne Survey: Various. LIDAR Airborne Survey. LIDAR Weeting Forest Research 0.5m DTM 17-JUL-2015 (BNG Project, FC England, Fugro Geospatial). [Mapped feature: #65050 Extent of earthworks based on aerial photographs and LiDAR survey., ENF145328]
  • <S3> Vertical Aerial Photograph: Various. Vertical Aerial Photograph. RAF/3G/TUD/UK/101 RV 6167-6168 30-MAR-1946 (HEA Original Print).

Object Types (0)

Related NHER Records (0)

Record last edited

Sep 12 2025 8:12AM

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