Example sentences of "as [prep] example at " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | First and foremost , there is the evidence provided by aerial photography ; when this is sufficiently extensive , as for example at Kenchester and Water Newton , there is usually enough data to publish a composite plan of the internal morphology , though normally the picture is far more fragmentary . |
2 | Second , there is the evidence derived from excavation itself , especially at those sites where the internal layout has been extensively sampled , as for example at Alcester , Baldock and Godmanchester . |
3 | A considerable number of sites fall into this category , even when there has been some aerial photography and excavation , as for example at Braintree and Horncastle . |
4 | At some sites , where good building stone was scarce , timber-framed structures predominated throughout the Roman occupation , as for example at Great Chesterford , where all the known buildings with the exception of the two late official structures were of timber construction with gravel or earth floors , plaster covered wattle-and-daub walling and probably thatched roofs . |
5 | The presence of an open gable end , perhaps with some sort of arrangement to accommodate wooden shutters , indicates the commercial importance attached to such premises , as for example at Catterick . |
6 | Comparable houses have been recognized , individually or in pairs , elsewhere , as for example at Braughing , Camerton , Droitwich and Margidunum . |
7 | In contrast , other Romano-Celtic temples lay within larger enclosures set alongside or apart from the centre of the settlement , as for example at Harlow , where the temple and its associated precinct lay in the middle of a ditched enclosure 4.2 ha ( 10 acres ) in extent . |
8 | One favoured location was directly alongside the main road frontages , as for example at Wall . |
9 | Some clearly occupied positions of convenience near to or alongside the main frontages , as for example at Chelmsford and probably Kenchester . |
10 | But by far the most important are those small towns where a major temple complex provided a functional focus within the plan , as for example at Bath or Harlow . |
11 | In its simplest form , this was often marked by the existence of field systems , as for example at Brampton , where they are known immediately beyond the settled frontages and their associated manufacturing areas . |
12 | This is especially true of those , often identified as burgi , which protected only a very small part of the settlement ( p. 35 below ) ; but even where larger areas were enclosed , most included only a fraction of the total , as for example at Catterick , Ilchester and Water Newton , where the inhabited extra-mural areas extended for considerable distances . |
13 | This evidence is echoed at a whole range of other small towns , and it is probably safe to suggest a similar interpretation for those sites where strip buildings are well attested but where either excavation or detailed evidence for trading activities is limited , as for example at Water Newton . |
14 | Archaeology can also demonstrate an interest in lead and its derivative alloy , pewter , from the evidence of workshops or stone moulds , as for example at Camerton , Nettleton Shrub and Towcester . |
15 | More usually , leather fragments and offcuts are the main indicators , as for example at Bath , Brampton , Carlisle , Middlewich and Water Newton . |