The earthworks, thought to be the entirety of the medieval village, are south of the present-day village of Alkmonton, on a south-west facing slope, next to Alkmonton Old Hall Farm to the south. They are well preserved; there is a
village green in the south of the site, and sunken trackways lead away from it. There is a platform, about by , thought to be the site of the medieval chapel. A font, now in St John's Church in Alkmonton, was found near here in 1844. There is a larger platform north of the supposed chapel, about by . There are other features, rectangular enclosures within which are building platforms. North and east of the site of the village are
ridge and furrow patterns, surviving to a height of , of the medieval
open-field system. ==See also==