Wolstonbury Cross Ridge Dyke

This ‘dyke’ cuts across the southern spur neck of Wolstonbury Hill, and this morning I find myself wondering where the main point of access was (if one originally existed) on this linear earthwork. Could it be at the central kink in the dyke, where a round barrow now sits on the Northern bank, or the area where the modern track bisects the bank? I walk down the ditch to where the dyke peters out and the slope gets steeper. The date of construction remains unknown. It could relate to a late Bronze Age/ Early Iron Age period of cultivation. Or, it could represent a ‘defensive outwork’ to the (speculative) period of defensive remodelling of Enclosure ‘C’ on top of the hill. As yet, nobody knows. I turn back and follow the ditch up to the ‘barrow’.