Bristol: Archaeological Site
Places and attractions in the Archaeological site category
Categories
- Church
- Park
- Museum
- Nightlife
- Georgian architecture
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Shopping
- Historical place
- History museum
- Street
- Vernacular architecture
- Concerts and shows
- Tower
- Memorial
- Bridge
- Neighbourhood
- Thomas Paty
- Harbor
- Shopping district
- Gothic architecture
- Area
- Art museum
- Shopping centre
- Theater
- Sacred and religious sites
- Specialty museum
- Music venue
- Art gallery
- Farm
- Ship
- Natural attraction
- Nature
- Archaeological site
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Canal
- Village
- Cinema
- Music and shows
Stanton Drew stone circles
The Stanton Drew stone circles are just outside the village of Stanton Drew in the English county of Somerset. The largest stone circle is the Great Circle, 113 metres in diameter and the second largest stone circle in Britain; it is considered to be one of the largest Neolithic monuments to have been built.
Maes Knoll
Maes Knoll is an Iron Age hill fort in Somerset, England, located at the eastern end of the Dundry Down ridge, south of the city of Bristol and north of the village of Norton Malreward near the eastern side of Dundry Hill. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Kings Weston Hill
Kings Weston Hill is a hill in the north of Bristol, England. It forms a ridge about 1 mile long, extending from Henbury to Shirehampton and separating Lawrence Weston to the north from Coombe Dingle to the south.
Wraxall Camp
Wraxall Camp, or Failand Camp, is a small round earthwork in Somerset. The remains are indistinct and thickly covered by woods, but it appears to have been an Iron Age farmstead, and not a defensive structure.