The mitigation works have expanded understanding of the layout of a medieval enclosure complex that was previously identified by trial trenching. Associated features including a droveway, pits and drainage gullies were also recorded. The layout of the three main enclosures appears to have been well planned; the ditches formed a rectilinear drainage network taking water from the south-west to the north-east, down the natural slope towards Cranfield Wood. Only a single formal entranceway was present in one of the enclosures, which was approached via a droveway from the north-west. Internal pits are of uncertain purpose but may have been watering holes. The pits form two regular groups suggesting well-planned activities. The lack of evidence for domestic structures supports a function of livestock containment or cultivation. Pottery of 13th to 15th century date recovered from the enclosure ditches, droveway, a drainage gully and a pit, attest to settlement activity in the vicinity, perhaps immediately to the south-west as a precursor to the 16th- to 17th-century Carnfield Hall. This relationship may be demonstrated by the place name Outseats. A series of later minor quarries in the south-west were located on higher ground that had been heavily truncated, probably by ploughing.