A programme of 117 trenches measuring up to 50m by 2m were targeted on anomalies of possible/probable archaeological origin identified by the previous geophysical survey (WYAS 2019) across six areas of the proposed development site (Areas 1-6). A single 10m by 2m trench was excavated in the south of Area 6. Areas 2 (Trenches 26-46), 3 (Trenches 47-64), 5 (Trenches 87-102) and 6 (Trenches 103-118) were investigated in September 2019 and Area 4 (Trenches 65-86) in January 2020. Trenches 1-25 in Area 1 were not investigated during this phase of evaluation due to access constraints. A series of potential areas of archaeological remains were identified in the survey results including an enclosure system (Area 3), two barrow ditches (Area 4 and 6) and a number of field boundary ditches that were present across the site. The proposed trench locations were subject to slight adjustment in the field in order to avoid services or other unforeseen obstacles. The trenches were located to investigate potential natural features and to test blank areas within the geophysical survey results. The trenches were excavated using a tracked machine fitted with a flat toothless bucket. Machining continued in spits down to the top of the natural geology or the archaeological horizon, whichever was encountered first. Once archaeological deposits had been exposed, excavation continued by hand. A sample of each feature was excavated in each trench as outlined within the project WSI (OA 2019a). Sufficient excavation was undertaken in each trench to resolve the principle aims of the evaluation. Where an exceptional number of archaeological deposits were uncovered, a sample excavation was undertaken in order to be minimally intrusive. Oxford Archaeology carried out an archaeological evaluation on the site of the proposed Oxfordshire Garden Village housing development, north of Eynsham, Oxfordshire, between September 2019 and January 2020. The fieldwork was commissioned by Terence O'Rourke Ltd, on behalf of Grosvenor Development Ltd. A preceding geophysical survey undertaken in 2019 detected a range of anomalies of possible or probable archaeological origin, including two circular/curvilinear anomalies suggestive of ring ditches and a series of linear anomalies interpreted as a series of enclosures or sub-enclosures. The geophysical survey results also reflect variations in the natural geology and medieval/post-medieval to modern agricultural land use. A total of 93 trenches were inve...