共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
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none 《Industrial archaeology review》2013,35(2):117-134
AbstractThe decision of Allied Ironfounders Ltd in 1950 to clean and make use of the area of the buried (Old Furnace) in the Upper Works at Coalbrookdale revealed the extent and condition of the remains. Clearance for measurement and photography was followed by a recognition of the importance of the site and the decision was taken for its preservation. Clearance revealed a problem particularly of a high ground water level and some of the most important features, early foundations and structures were cleared up while regulating this deep drainage. Much structural stabilization was done and the perennial problem of the preservation of ironwork encountered. A small museum was added to illustrate 250 years of the Coalbrookdale Company. 相似文献
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Dan M. Healan 《Journal of Archaeological Research》2012,20(1):53-115
The site of Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico, is well known for its distinctive architecture and sculpture that came to light in excavations
initiated some 70 years ago. Less well known is the extensive corpus of archaeological research conducted over the past several
decades, revealing a city that at its height covered an area of c. 16 km2 and incorporated a remarkably diverse landscape of hills, plains, alluvial valleys, and marsh. Its dense, urban character
is evident in excavations at over 22 localities that uncovered complex arrangements of residential compounds whose nondurable
architecture left relatively few surface traces. Evidence of craft production includes lithic and ceramic production loci
in specific sectors of the ancient city. Tula possessed a large and densely settled hinterland that apparently encompassed
the surrounding region, including most of the Basin of Mexico, and its area of direct influence appears to have extended to
the north as far as San Luís Potosí. Tula is believed to have originated as the center of a regional state that consolidated
various Coyotlatelco polities and probably remnants of a previous Teotihuacan-controlled settlement system. Its pre-Aztec
history exhibits notable continuity in settlement, ceramics, and monumental art and architecture. The nature of the subsequent
Aztec occupation supports ethnohistorical and other archaeological evidence that Tula’s ruins were what the Aztecs called
Tollan. 相似文献
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Theresa McDonald 《International Journal of Historical Archaeology》1998,2(2):73-112
The Deserted Village in Slievemore, currently the subject of research by archaeologists and students at the annual Achill Archaeological Summer Field School, consists of 74 buildings of an original 137. A survey of the architecture of the houses, excavation of a selected house, No. 36, and a field survey of the palimpsest of field systems surrounding the village suggest an origin for the village in the Early Medieval Period (A.D. 500–1200). Successive settlements modified, rebuilt, and destroyed much of the fabric of the original settlement, but sufficient diagnostic elements remain to plot tentatively the evolution of settlement up to and including final abandonment in the Post-Famine Period, ca. 1850–1890. 相似文献