Industrial Archaeology Review

Papers
(The median citation count of Industrial Archaeology Review is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2022-06-01 to 2026-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
Technology, Economics and Canal Development; An Early Technical Book and What It Reveals4
Abstracts3
A Transitional Technology in the Chinese Cement Industry: The Development and Challenge of the Liulihe Cement Plant3
Histories of People and Landscape. Essays on the Sheffield Region in Memory of David Hey2
Abstracts2
The Coming of the Railway: A New Global History, 1750–18501
The Buildings of the Malting Industry: the Production of Malt from Prehistory to the 21st Century1
Abstracts1
Brickmaking History and Heritage1
Abstracts0
Zinc-Smelting Technology of China in the Ming and Qing Dynasties: The Smelting Furnaces0
The History and Archaeology of Hendon Sidings Enterprise Zone, Adjacent to Prospect Row, Port of Sunderland0
Park Glasshouse, Birmingham — a Site of 19th-Century Innovation0
Industrial Heritage in the Czech Republic Industrial Architecture: Designers and Plans , edited by Lukáš Beran, 2021. ISBN 978-80-01-06890-8 The Quest for0
Editorial0
Requiem for a Film Studio: The Death and Afterlife of Denham0
The Architecture of Steam: Waterworks and the Victorian Sanitary Crisis The Architecture of Steam: Waterworks and the Victorian Sanitary Crisis , edited by James Douet, 0
Stories from the Cold Hill: Reassessing the Bryn Oer Tramroad0
Rediscovery of a Brickworks Narrow-Gauge Industrial Railway Tunnel in Stołczyn, Poland0
The Historic American Engineering Record at 500
Industrial Archaeology in Tuscany: The Case of the Pianaccioli Kiln0
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott’s K2 Telephone Kiosk — A Design Classic0
Unravelling the Story of the Lefka Railway Complex in Piraeus, Greece. Past, Present and Future Perspectives0
The Archaeology of Industrialisation, Critical Approaches and Updated Toolbox0
The Installation of Electric Bells and Telephones at Hatfield House: Lord Salisbury’s Adoption of Communication Technologies in the Later 19th Century0
An Archaeology of the Industrial Landscape: The Industrial History and Heritage of the Belemedik–Hacıkırı Railway Construction Corridor0
Archaeological Investigation and Industrial Heritage Study of the Wanshan Mercury Mining Site in Guizhou Province, China0
Street Furniture0
Railway Architecture in Late Qing China: The Stations of Imperial Railways of North China in Beijing (1890s–1911)0
Editorial0
England’s Military Heritage from the Air0
The Industrial Heritage of the Chilterns0
Assessing the Significance of Industrial Heritage: The Case of Volos, Greece0
The Vale de Milhaços Gunpowder Factory in Portugal from the 19th to the 21st Century: From Steam-Powered Industry to Heritage for the Future0
Rediscovering Copperopolis: The Hafod Plate Rolling Mill, Swansea0
‘The Iron Horse of Transport and Trade Has Climbed Over the Andes’: The Antofagasta-Bolivia Railway, Industrial Expansion and Cross-Border Relations in the South-Central Andes (1889–1952)0
‘The Slate Landscape of Northwest Wales’ — A New Industrial World Heritage Site0
Editorial0
D. Morgan Rees: A Welsh Industrial Archaeologist for Welsh Industrial Heritage0
Millstone and Grindstone Production in the Pennines and North-west England: A Historical and Archaeological Survey0
The Railway Network of Sétif, Algeria: Industrial Heritage in Search of Recognition0
Editorial0
Gasholders – A History in Pictures0
The Archaeology of the Ironbridge Gorge in 20 Digs0
The Archaeology of Early Steam Locomotives0
The Saltpetre Cave Sites and Saltpetre Production Technology of Ming and Qing Dynasties in South-West China0
L.T.C. ROLT: A Collector’s Bibliography L.T.C. ROLT: A Collector’s Bibliography , compiled by Peter R.G. Roberts, viii + 280 pp., £50 (hb), ISBN 978-1-3999-1237-2, plus 0
The Offerton Hat Works and Stockport’s Felt Hat Industry0
A Place to Put Your Pint: Excavation of J.M. Bennett & Sons Iron Foundry, Manchester0
Industrial History and Heritage of the Karaburun Mercury Mining District, Türkiye0
Salford Twist Mill: Uncovering an Iconic Textile Factory0
Initiating Transformations. Industrial Heritage as an Asset for Regional Development. Critical Views from and for the Global South0
Oasts and Hop Kilns A History0
Resolving an Enigma: The Discovery of a Continuous Annular Tunnel Kiln at the Royal Doulton Potteries, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent0
Residual Grounds: Infrastructural Archaeology and Glasgow’s Showpeople0
Editorial0
Towards Recognition of Industrial Heritage in Algeria: The Square Concrete Grain Silos of Setif0
Dam Construction, Company Towns and Planned Urban Development: The Example of Salto del Esla, Spain0
A Field Study on Conservation of Industrial Heritage: The Belemedik Middle Construction Site0
Lost and Found(ry): Uncovering the Cast-Iron Legacy of Joseph Stubbs’ Openshaw Works0
Lead Houses: White Lead Processing at the Chester Leadworks0
Archaeological Traces of Pre-industrial and Industrial Dyeing Workshops in the Czech Republic0
Mills Transformed. Stories of Mill Regeneration0
The North-Light Shed in Scandinavia — The Early Years0
The Work of Stott & Sons for the Linotype Company at Altrincham 2: The Housing Estate0
Disentangling Industrial Archaeology and Industrial Heritage: A Review of Research Methods and Paradigms0
The Heritage of the Textile Industry, A Thematic Study for TICCIH, The International Committee for the Conservation of the Industrial Heritage0
Editorial0
The Tools of Empire?0
Ironopolis. The Architecture of Middlesbrough0
Historic England Research Magazine0
Editorial0
Bricks of Victorian London: A Social and Economic History0
Accommodating Prisoners of War: A Survey of the Weston Hostel0
Fabbriche Ritrovate: Patrimonio Industriale e Progetto di Architettura in Italia (Rediscovered Factories: Industrial Heritage and Architectural Project in Italy)0
Banat Narrow-Gauge Railway: Context and Continuity0
Mapping Newcomen-Type Engines During the 18th Century in Prescot and Whiston0
John Rennie ‘Engineer of many splendid and useful works’0
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