The excavations at Fairfield Park revealed a later Bronze Age hilltop
enclosure and an extensive early Iron Age settlement. As one of the
first large-scale excavations of an early Iron Age settlement in eastern
England, the site makes a significant contribution to our understanding
of the later prehistory of the region. In particular, the evidence sheds
much light on issues of the organisation of settlement space and
practices of ritual deposition. The settlement dates to around the
5th-4th centuries BC, and incorporated enclosures, roundhouses and
numerous storage pits. The large artefact assemblages included high
status metalwork, pottery with unique forms of decoration, and a set of
49 bone weaving tools from a single pit. Human remains and animal
burials had been placed in several other pits. Good environmental
evidence was also obtained.