Industrial archaeology
Industrial archaeology concerns itself with the physical remains of the
Industrial Revolution. It is born out of the need to record and preserve the remains of industrialisation before they disappear. It is a part of landscape study and includes cultural aspects also. The term may have been coined in the 1950s in
Manchester.
- Aqueduct
- Boat lift
- Beam engine
- Brick kiln
- Boring mill
- Bridge
- Canal, Aqueduct, Barge, Boat lift, Flights of locks, Inclined plane, Narrowboat
- Canal lock
- Charcoal
- Chimney
- Clayworks
- Coal mine
- Cotton mill
- Dam, Reservoir
- Dock
- Engine, Beam engine, Internal combustion engine, Mill engine, Steam engine
- Factory
- Five-sail windmill
- Flax mill
- Flight of locks
- Flint mill
- Flying shuttle
- Fulling mill
- Furnace
- Horse tram
- Inclined plane
- Internal combustion engine
- Kiln
- Lighthouse
- Locomotive
- Luddites
- Mill, Boring mill, Cotton mill, Flax mill, Fulling mill, Hand mill, Iron mill, Lumber mill, Oil mill, Post mill, Rolling mill, Saw mill, Smock mill, Spinning mill, Steel rolling mill, Textile mill, Tide mill, Tower mill, Watermill, Windmill, Woollen mill,
- Mill engine
- Mill stone
- Mine, Coal mine, Gold mine, Tin mine
- Railway
- Reservoir, Dam
- Spinning, Spinning jenny, Spinning mill, Spinning mule
- Steam engine
- Tin mine
- Train
- Tram
- Tunnel
- Warehouse
- Water (resource), Watermill, Waterwheel
- Windmill, Windpump, Five-sail windmill
- Woollen mill
See also:
List of Conservation topics,
Conservation in the United Kingdom,
Industrial archaeology of Dartmoor,
History of Science and Technology, Association for Industrial Archaeology