Excavations at the Eton Rowing Course and along the Maidenhead, Windsor
and Eton Flood Alleviation Channel revealed extensive evidence for
occupation in an evolving landscape of floodplains and gravel terraces
set amidst the shifting channels of the Thames.
The most significant evidence was a series of early Neolithic midden
deposits, preserved in hollows left by infilled palaeochannels. These
deposits contained dense concentrations of pottery, worked flint, animal
bone and other finds, and are put into context by other artefact
scatters from the floodplain, pits on the gravel terrace and waterlogged
environmental deposits from palaeochannels. Early Mesolithic lakeside
occupation, later Mesolithic flint scatters along a former channel of
the Thames, pits from the middle and late Neolithic and activity areas
of the Beaker and Early Bronze Age, demonstrate longer term changes in
patterns of occupation.
The excavations also revealed early, middle and late Neolithic human
remains in palaeochannels, middle Neolithic crouched inhumation burials
and early Neolithic cremated remains. An oval barrow may have first been
cut in the early Neolithic. Other ring ditches date from the late
Neolithic/early Bronze Age; one contained a central cremation burial in
a Collared Urn together with pyre material and the remains of a bier.