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This is a list of geothermal springs in the United Kingdom, otherwise known as warm springs and hot springs (defined as those hotter than 37 degrees C): England [ edit ]
The Pocklington Iron Age burial ground is a prehistoric cemetery discovered in 2014 on the outskirts of Pocklington in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.Excavations carried out on an ongoing basis since then, have uncovered more than 160 skeletons and more than 70 square barrows thought to date to the Middle Iron Age that are attributed to the Arras culture, an ancient British culture of ...
St Ann's Well is an ancient natural warm spring in Buxton, Derbyshire in England. The drinking well is located at the foot of The Slopes (formerly St Ann's Cliff) and opposite the Crescent hotel and the Old Hall Hotel. St Ann's Well Dressing in 2007. The natural warm waters of Buxton have been revered since Roman times.
Barclodiad y Gawres, Neolithic cruciform passage grave. Belas Knap, Neolithic long barrow. Bryn Celli Ddu, Bronze Age passage grave on the site of a Neolithic stone circle and henge. Clava cairn, Bronze Age circular chamber tomb cairn. Devil's Lapful, Neolithic long cairn in Northumberland. Duggleby Howe, round barrow.
Gravestones in Welford Road Cemetery, Leicester. This is a list of cemeteries in England still in existence. Only cemeteries which are notable and can be visited are included. Churchyards and graveyards that belong to churches and are still in existence are not included. Ancient burial grounds are excluded.
One grave contained a snaffle bit, rare in an Anglo-Saxon context. [26] Mill Hill: Deal, Kent: 7th century CE 112+ 1940 inhumation only cemetery. [4] Mucking: Mucking, Essex: 5th to early 7th centuries CE 800 1965–1978 excavation The cemetery is on the same site as Romano-British settlement. [27] Norton-on-Tees Norton-on-Tees, County Durham
The settlement was based around its natural warm springs. The Roman occupation ran from around 75 AD to 410 AD. [1] Today it is the town of Buxton, Derbyshire in England. Aquae Arnemetiae means 'Waters of Arnemetia'. Arnemetia was the Romano-British goddess of the sacred grove (the name Arnemetia was derived from the Celtic for beside the ...
Buckland Anglo-Saxon cemetery was a place of burial. It is located on Long Hill in the town of Dover in Kent, South East England. Belonging to the Anglo-Saxon period, it was part of the much wider tradition of burial in Early Anglo-Saxon England. Buckland was an inhumation-only cemetery, with no evidence of cremation. The cemetery was on a ...