Evaluation by R Lambert of SCAU revealed two late post-medieval ditches, an undated ditch, and an elongated pit or ditch. A Neolithic or Bronze Age flint tool recovered from the latter feature may be residual.
Report by P Arnold on dendrochronological analysis of an oak door reveals that the door was constructed from four planks, probably from the same tree, felled between 1106 and 1138. (400)
Watching brief by N Shaikhley of SCAU during the excavation of five geotechnical test pits. No finds or features of archaeological interest were revealed.
Evaluation by E Sayer of PCA in advance of residential redevelopment revealed the impacts of 19th and early 20th century development, but no older deposits were found relating to the farm complex present on the site since the early 17th century.
Archaeological assessment by N Bannister for the Woodlands Trust of secondary woodland on a former site of Knaphill Nursery, a late 19th century internationally renowned commercial nursery. The most common earthworks revealed were boundary banks, the structure and form of which suggest that they originated as field boundaries. Depressions occurring within the wood may be bomb craters.