The test pit locations were located using an RTK GPS and excavated using a mechanical 360� excavator with a toothless ditching bucket. Excavation extended to the point of water ingress (1.3-1.82m). Deposits were recorded using archaeological context sheets and the machined sections were photographed from the trench edge. Sieving of the clay-rich sediments was not possible, so excavated spoil was spread out on the surface and searched for artefactual remains. Following the excavation, the excavated test pits were re-surveyed using an RTK GPS and immediately back-filled. The investigation revealed a picture of mid-late Holocene floodplain development characterised by gradual channel abandonment and consolidation. Palaeotopography and drainage at the site is constrained by late Pleistocene sand and gravel deposits forming an elevated plateau or 'island' occupying a central position. Such islands are fairly common Nene Valley floodplain features and have been found to provide relatively stable land surfaces in the Early Holocene and a focus for Mesolithic activity. Hydrological change was initiated during the late Neolithic period with the silting of a former channel crossing the SE corner of the site commencing 4,819 calBP. Recovered macrofossil remains indicate an open landscape and slow-moving water body, suggesting gradual channel demise. This fits the wider picture of floodplain evolution recorded in the Nene Valley, which tends to be characterised by channel simplification since the Mid-Holocene. A further sequence of organic-rich deposits recorded c. 20m to the west of the current river channel accumulated between 4,816 and 2,186 calBP and may indicate the lateral migration of the primary channel or simply its contraction and deepening as a result of accelerated bank aggradation. Palynological assessment of the channel deposits indicates a contemporary open pastoral landscape, with local arable cultivation also suggested. Palaeoenvironmental macrofossils from the channel suggest a slow-moving channel set within an open environment, which is consistent with gradual channel abandonment. From the mid/late-Holocene and particularly from later historical periods, the sedimentary regime was dominated by overbank alluvial deposition, forming the main sedimentary unit of alluvial silts and clays that blanket the site. The close proximity of Neolithic and Bronze Age funerary remains suggests nearby settlement, most likely occupying elevated ground to the nort...