Whiteleaf Hill in the Chilterns lies to the east of Thame, sitting above Whiteleaf Cross, A surviving Neolithic burial mound sits on the hill, visible from Site F.

Around 3,700 BC a male person was buried there, in a wooden enclosure, inside an oval shaped mound. He was it seems a person of some importance, being buried alone in a small mound.

This was on the cusp of the construction of the Causewayed Enclosure down below at Thame. Could he have had a hand in making it happen? On the other hand, if he died and was buried atop the Chilterns, looking down, did that in some way inspire the people below to construct the Causewayed Enclosure looking up?