

Burfa camp seen while wandering round in circles looking for Knobley stone.
Bit overgrown, then?
A very powerful enclosure, this.... as far as I could tell multivallate except to the south, where the slope took care of matters anyway.
The wooded bulk of Burfa Bank from Lower Harpton Farm to the south.
Looking west from the southern rampart. The sunlit valley below is that of the Hindwell Brook, an area rich in round barrows and standing stones, including the Four Stones four-poster.
The apparent circular earthwork inside the fort.
The inside of the southern rampart, at the partially cleared east end of the fort.
The northeastern corner of the fort.
Looking west along the inner northern ditch.
The view from the northern rampart, showing the steep fall of the ground away through the trees.
The northern rampart from the inside, showing the counterscarp.
Looking down into the ditch on the northern side.
The northern entrance.
The final approach to the northern entrance leads up the “ramp” on the right of the picture. The inner northern ditch stretches away, straight ahead.
The NMR record (available through Coflein) describes the fort:
A substantial and irregular hilltop enclosure, 579m by up to 187m, defined by a bank and ditch above steep slopes, except to the W, where there are three-four banks and ditches, incorporating a torturous entrance approach.
RB material of the l.1st-2nd C. has been found here.