on
Dartmoor, a late Bronze Age settlement Hut circles are particularly numerous on
Dartmoor, where there are an estimated 5,000. One of the best-known sites is
Grimspound, which is exceptionally well preserved owing to its solid stone construction, the numerous hut circles being enclosed by a stone wall. It dates to the
Late Bronze Age. It was first settled about 1300 BC. The 24 hut circles are surrounded by a massive granite perimeter wall, which may have stood tall in places. The roundhouses, with an average diameter of , were each built of a double ring of granite slabs with a rubble infill – a technique still used in
dry-stone walling. One, Hut 3, has a surviving porchway, with the two jamb stones still upright, although the
lintel has fallen. There is good evidence of human activity: pottery, scrapers, and
pot boilers were found in the huts during Victorian excavations. However, few organic artefacts survived in the acidic soil. Ashes were found at a central hearth in each hut. At
Halangy Down in the
Isles of Scilly are the remains of an Iron Age village composed of round houses below the
Bant's Carn Bronze Age burial chamber. == Scotland ==