Excavations at nine sites along the route of the Great Barford Bypass
provided a rare opportunity to investigate an extensive area of the
South Midlands claylands, a landscape that has hitherto seen little
archaeological work. The excavations produced evidence for the long-term
development of the social landscape, agrarian economy and environment of
the area from prehistory to the Middle Ages. Sporadic occupation took
place during the Neolithic and Bronze Age, with systematic colonisation
first occurring in the later Iron Age. One of the four excavated Iron
Age settlements showed striking ritual activity, including what is
believed to be the first conclusive evidence for the long-term curation
of human bone within Iron Age Britain. In the Roman period, two of the
settlements continued to be occupied and two new sites were founded.
Associated features included pottery kilns and cremation and inhumation
cemeteries. Early Saxon activity was also present at one of the Roman
sites. A new settlement pattern appeared in the late Saxon/early
medieval period, with the establishment of three farmsteads or hamlets,
all of which were abandoned by the 13th century. The implications of the
evidence for our understanding of the archaeology of the wider region
are fully discussed.