There be ghosts...
Warden Law is the site of several prehistoric burials and other remains, but it has a very confused history of discovery and excavation. In 1979 an urned cremation was discovered in the quarry at Warden Law. It had originally been buried in a short cist covered by a barrow with a longitudinal axis approximately north-south and measuring a minimum of 11 metres long and 1.10 metres high. The cist was formed by six split-sandstone slabs, placed at right angles to each other, making a small, stone box, 300 mm square. The base of the box rested directly on the glacial till. It was completely sealed by a mound of earth to a height of 600 mm, indicating that the cist was not introduced into a pre-existing mound. It is possible that other burials may have been present before quarrying damaged the burial mound. The urn is of an unusual form in a red-brown gritted fabric, fractured but complete, and is 215 mm high, with a rim diameter of 231 mm. The internal rim bevel is decorated with oblique incisions, and the external also with short oblique slashes, below which longer incisions descend almost to the base. The cremated remains of child aged 3-6 were present. The finds are in Sunderland Museum.
The law is by the side of a road known as Hangman's Lane.
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