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期刊名称:INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY REVIEW

ISSN:0309-0728
出版频率:Semi-annual
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://maney.co.uk/
期刊网址:http://maney.co.uk/index.php/journals/iar/
主题范畴:ARCHAEOLOGY;    HISTORY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Industrial Archaeology Review aims to publish research in industrial archaeology, which is defined as a period study embracing the tangible evidence of social, economic and technological development in the period since industrialisation, generally from the early-18th century onwards. It is a peer-reviewed academic journal, with scholarly standards of presentation, yet seeks to encourage submissions from both amateurs and professionals which will inform all those working in the field of current developments.

 

Industrial Archaeology Review is the journal of the Association for Industrial Archaeology. Published twice a year, the focal point and common theme of its contents is the surviving evidence of industrial activity. Emphasis is placed on the practical aspects of a subject in which fieldwork plays an essential part, including recording, surveying, excavation, interpretation, conservation and protective legislation. While deriving much of its material from within the British Isles, the journal aims to be international in its coverage of the subject, presenting material of relevance and value to those concerned with industrial archaeology throughout the world. The membership of its Editorial Board reflects these aims.

 

- Articles cover the technological, archaeological, historical, geographical, environmental, social and architectural aspects of the subject.

- Book reviews provide a critical appraisal of the latest publications.

- Abstracts keep the reader informed of matters of interest to industrial archaeologists appearing in local, national and specialist journals.

 

Industrial Archaeology Review is now indexed in ISI Web of Knowledge


Instructions to Authors

General
1. The Review is published twice yearly by Maney Publishing on behalf of the Association for Industrial Archaeology, two issues comprising one volume.

2. Copyright of articles is to be vested in the Association for Industrial Archaeology, but copyright for the typographical layout is vested in Maney. Authors of articles must complete the assignment of copyright form which will be sent to them. It is recognised that Government employees, staff of statutory bodies etc. are unable to do this, and they should inform the Editor accordingly. The Association and Maney place no restriction on the right of authors to re-use the content of articles published in the Review provided that the original source of publication is acknowledged. If authors are approached by publishers of collections of papers for permission to reproduce articles from the Review in their entirety, they must refer the publishers to Maney.

3. Contributors to the Review shall receive 25 offprints of their paper to be shared equally if there is more than one author to an article, together with a complete copy of the issue in which their article appears. Contributors may also purchase further quantities from Maney.

4. Contributors are encouraged to seek publication subventions, particularly in the case of reports on funded projects. 
 
Length
5. Articles should be between 5,000 and 8,000 words and should not exceed the maximum without the prior agreement of the Editor. Shorter articles are also welcomed.

6. Contributors should provide a summary of their article of between 100 and 150 words, and a brief note on themselves concerned particularly with their work and interests in industrial archaeology. 
 
Presentation of Manuscript
7. All manuscripts must be submitted in hard copy with double spacing on one side of A4 paper only, allowing wide margins, left-justified. The pages should be numbered in one continuous sequence. Contributors are recommended to keep a duplicate copy. The front page should give title, author's name, address for correspondence (plus telephone, fax and email if possible) and an abbreviated title (for running headlines within the article).

8. Once accepted for publication, the final version of an article may be submitted on disk but should still be accompanied by two copies of the print-out, double-spaced. Articles should be sent on 3.5 inch floppy disks in Word and text format for reading into an IBM-compatible computer. If authors use other programmes, e.g. Word Perfect, please consult the Editor before sending the disk.

9. Give your article a title and your name in the form you wish it to be published. Sub-headings can be very useful in breaking up the body of the text. Leave a line space above the sub-heading and type it left-justified on a separate line. 
 
House Style
10. Please avoid the use of the first person, also the excessive use of jargon and technical vocabulary. If specialist words are essential, they should be explained in the text or in the case of a large number in a separate glossary.

11. Avoid the inclusion of information which will become out of date: 'five years ago' will be meaningless to a reader after publication date. 
 
Quotations
12. Quotations and direct speech should be shown with single quotation marks. Use double quotation marks only for a quote within a quote.

13. Quotations of four lines or more should be indented one tab and left without quotation marks.

14. Contractions in a quotation may be expanded to make them clearer, using square brackets e.g. Parl[iament], it [the coal industry]. 
 
Dates 
15. Dates should be expressed in day-month-year order, e.g. 7 August 1834. Do not use abbreviations like 'th' and 'st'.

16. The names of centuries should not be spelt out, e.g. the 19th century, 19th-century kiln, mid-19th-century kiln.

17. Periods of years should be expressed as follows: 1801-6, 1856-64, 1881-7.

18. Decades should be identified in numbers not words, e.g. 1840s not eighteen forties. Apostrophes are not used to pluralise numerals. 
 
Numerals 
19. Write numbers up to and including ten in words. Use numerals for 11 upwards and in all tabulated information.

20. Dimensions and measurements should appear in figures, e.g. the canal was 9.5 miles in length.

21. Either imperial or metric units may be used but should be consistent within the article. If imperial units are used, the metric equivalent should be given in round brackets. 
 
Abbreviations 
22. In general omit full points in common abbreviations, e.g. A40, NNE, am, OS, e.g., ie. Contracted words, eg Ltd, Dr, St, vols, nos, fols, eds do not have full points. Where words are part-abbreviated they take a full point, eg vol., fol., ref., ibid., et al. (Note Latin should be in italic). 

Where given names are abbreviated a full point should be used, e.g. Nicholas = N.
Where there is more than one initial these are unspaced, e.g. N.J. Smith.

23. Abbreviations of units; do not use full points or pluralise with a terminal 's', e.g. 5cm not 5cm. or 5cms. There is no space between number and unit. 
 
Underlining
24. Words underlined with a single straight line will be printed as italics, or you may use italics.

25. Use italics for names of ships, locomotives, books, journals, foreign words and phrases.

26. Words underlined with a wavy line will be printed in BOLD type. This can be used for emphasis but should be employed sparingly. 
 
Notes and References
27. The method of citation to be used is in general accordance with References to Published Materials, British Standards Institution BS 1629 (1989), using the Running Notes system number 3.4 therein.

28. The Author may use standard end notes, as detailed in sections 29-34 below, or provide a Bibliography together with abbreviated end notes as detailed in sections 35-6 below. Documentary references should be cited in full in either case. Do not use computer-based footnote programmes.

29. References should be numbered consecutively in the text, either superscripted or in brackets, and should be listed at the end of the article, beginning on a new page.

30. References to printed books should state: name of author, title of book (underlined or in italics), place of publication other than London, publisher, edition (if not first), date of publication, and page number referred to, e.g: 

Pevsner, N., The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire (Penguin, 2nd edn, 1979), 88. 
Hadfield, C., British Canals: an Illustrated History (Newton Abbott: David & Charles, 3rd edn, 1966), 21. 
Stratton, M. & B. Trinder, Industrial England (Batsford/English Heritage, 1997), 23. 
Buchanan, B.J. (ed.), Gunpowder: the History of an International Technology (Bath: Bath University Press, 1996), 92. 
 
31. References to articles in journals and periodicals should state: name of author, title of article (in single quotation marks), title of journal (in italics), volume and/or part number, date of publication, page numbers of article, or actual page referred to, e.g:

Purton, W., 'On the Geology of Coalbrookdale', Geological Magazine, II (1865) 72. 
Rogers, A., 'Rural Industries and Social Structure: the Framework Knitting Industry of South Nottinghamshire 1670-1840', Textile History, 12 (1981), 7-37. 
 
32. References to manuscripts should state: location (with abbreviation after first mention), archive and document details, identification letter or number, page or dating references, volume or folio, e.g:

Public Record Office (PRO), Papers of Miles Nightingale, C.109/1, 17. 
British Library (BL), Additional MSS, 51533, Vol. CCXVI. 
National Library of Wales (NLW), Gogerddan MSS, Talybont and Esgair Hir Bargains, 23 November 1839. 
Leicestershire Record Office (LRO), Hastings Papers, DE/500/108, 1863. 
PRO PC 2/77, fols 25, 31.

If there are a number of references from the same repository, a separate list of abbreviations of repository names should precede the list of references. 
 
33. Repeat citations of the same document or publication should each be given a new reference number in sequence. The abbreviation op. cit. should not be used. The new reference should refer back to the first citation of the work, giving the author(s)' name(s) or short document title and stating the new page number, e.g:

Pevsner, N., ref. 6, 132. 
Gogerddan MSS, ref. 13, 31 December 1842. 
 
34. The abbreviation ibid. may be used when a reference is identical with the immediately preceding one in all respects except the page number, e.g:

Eckel, E.C., Cements, Limes and Plasters (Wiley: New York, 1928), 43. 
Ibid., 71. 
 
Bibliography
35. Where desirable a separate bibliography and reading list may be provided. Entries should be in alphabetical order of first author surname of books or articles or the first word of the title (omitting 'the', 'a', 'some' etc) for other publications or reports.

Hadfield, C., British Canals: an Illustrated History (Newton Abbott: David & Charles, 3rd edn, 1966) 
Pevsner, N., The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire (Penguin, 2nd edn, 1979) 
Rogers, A., 'Rural Industries and Social Structure: the Framework Knitting Industry of South Nottinghamshire 1670-1840', Textile History, 12 (1981), 7-37. 
Stratton, M. & B. Trinder, Industrial England (Batsford/English Heritage, 1997) 
 

36. Where a bibliography is provided and referred to in your text, an abbreviated title may be used in the reference, eg:

Pevsner, Nottinghamshire, 88.
Hadfield, British Canals, 21.
Stratton & Trinder, Industrial England, 23.
Rogers, 'Rural Industries', 7-37.

 
Grid References
37. For Great Britain, full six figure national grid references e.g. NGR SK 314152 should be given where appropriate, particularly in descriptions of surviving sites and buildings. 
 
Illustrations
38. Both line drawings and half-tones (photographs) are numbered in sequence as they appear. They should be described as Figures in the text and sent at the same time as the manuscript. Where possible the contributor's name should appear on the reverse of all illustrations.

39. Prepare a separate caption sheet for the figures including any acknowledgement necessary. It is the responsibility of the author(s) to clear copyright. Illustrations will be returned after publication.

40. Maximum sizes for illustrations: dimensions in millimetres 
WIDTH x LENGTH 
67.5 x 248 103 x 248 141 x 248 177 x 248

41. Photographs 
i. Photographs should be at least 5in x 4in or 128mm x 102mm.
ii. Photographs should be black and white, sharply focused, with good contrast and printed on glossy paper. Colour transparencies and prints are acceptable but may give inferior results.
iii. They should be numbered by means of a ringed number on the reverse using a soft pencil. The top of the figure should also be indicated by an arrow on the reverse.

42. Line drawings, diagrams, maps 
i. Figures should be drawn using permanent black ink on good quality cartridge paper or board, tracing paper or film. Photocopies are not usually acceptable, but contributors should consult the Editors regarding their quality. The same applies to computer generated graphics. 
ii. Lettering should be applied either by stencil or dry transfer and the style should be consistent throughout; HELVETICA or UNIVERS type faces are preferred. Avoid lengthy keys on diagrams; these may be supplied in manuscript for type-setting. 
iii. Figures are better drawn at larger than final size so that they can be reduced for reproduction, note final maximum sizes shown in (40) above. Magnifications of more than five times should be avoided. 

iv. LINES - MINIMUM WIDTHS for legibility
    Original size                          x 5               x 4               x 3               x 2
    Pen size                               .9/1.2           .7/1.0           .5/.7             .35/.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    LETTERING - MINIMUM SIZES for legibility
    Original size                          x 5               x 4               x 3               x 2
    Minimum size (pt)                  36                24                20                12
    Min. height mm app.              10                8                  6                  3

vi. HATCHING/SHADING 

Care must be taken that any shading or hatching on the original does not lose definition when reduced. 

vii. SCALES

A linear scale showing an actual length eg 1m, 5m or 10m should be used; written scales eg 1 to 50 or 1cm = 1m are meaningless when the figure has been reduced. 

viii. DIRECTION

A north point should be indicated on all maps and plans. 

ix. BORDER 

A plain single line border may be provided of the larger width appropriate to magnification, see (iv.) above. 
x. Each figure should be numbered on the face well outside the border/print area or on the reverse.

Images should be supplied electronically in CMYK format as good-quality TIFF or EPS files, suitable for printing. As a guide images should be submitted at a minimum input scanning resolution of 300 dpi for full colour, 350-400 dpi for half tones, 600 dpi for slides or transparencies, 800 dpi for simple line and 1200 dpi for fine line illustrations. Please note that the final reproduction quality is dependent on original supply of correct format and resolution. All scanned images should be accompanied by a hard copy print out for reference. The author must obtain written evidence of permission to reproduce images (in all formats, in perpetuity and in all geographical regions worldwide) from the copyright owner for the use of any illustrative matter in the journal and will be liable for any fee charged by the owner of the image. The caption should include relevant credit of the permission of the copyright holder to reproduce the image. For more information please see www.maney.co.uk/authors/copyright.

Permissions
Any reproduction from Industrial Archaeology Review, apart from for the purposes of review, private research or 'fair dealing', must have the permission of the Society for Industrial Archaeology. Requests for such permission must be addressed to 
permissions@maney.co.uk or Permissions Section, Maney Publishing, at the above address, who acts on behalf of the Society. In all cases, acknowledgement must be made to Industrial Archaeology Review.

Copyright
Authors who wish to reproduce material from previously published sources or where the copyright is owned by a third party, such as sections of text, tables or images, must obtain written permission from the copyright holder (usually the publisher) and the author(s)/artist(s) of the original material. A line giving the full source of the material should be included in the manuscript. If material from the author's own published work is to be used, permission must still be obtained from that publisher. Copyright is required for use in all formats (including digital), in perpetuity and in all geographical regions worldwide. For more information, please see the copyright advice for authors section of the author section of the Maney website
www.maney.co.uk/authors/copyright.

Proofs
43. Manuscripts should be checked very carefully before submission to eliminate factual and typographical errors. Contributors will receive one set of proofs, which should be corrected and returned to the Editor within 3 days of receipt: contributors should inform the Editor if they cannot comply with this requirement. Proofs not returned on time will be regarded as not requiring correction. Alterations which go beyond the correction of typographical errors may be disallowed or charged to the contributor. 
 
Dr David Gwyn
Govannon Consultancy
Nant y Felin
Llanllyfni Road
Pen y Groes
Caeranrfon
Gwynedd LL54 6LY
Tel: 01286 881857
Email:
govannonconsult@hotmail.com

 

Eprints
Authors of papers in Industrial Archaeology Review receive a screen-resolution PDF of the published version. Orders for digital offprints may be made at the time proofs are distributed. This PDF may be forwarded to co-authors without separate permission being required from the publisher. The PDF cannot be used for commercial purposes. Industrial Archaeology Review must be cited as the original source of publication and a link to
www.maney.co.uk/journals/iar should be included with any listing. This PDF may be posted on authors' individual websites or that of their institution. Authors are entitled to make copies of the article for reasonable personal use only. For more information please see Maney's copyright and permissions policy and advice for authors page available in the Maney Author Area www.maney.co.uk/authors/permissions. Authors should note that eprints are produced as screen resolution PDFs, so the printed quality will not match that of the print copies of the journal.

 

Contributors to Industrial Archaeology Review are entitled to buy copies of the issue where their article appears or full individual* subscriptions to the journal at a 20% discount on the RRP. Please follow this link for price information www.maney.co.uk/authors#discount and email subscriptions@maney.co.uk to place your order. 

 

*Individual subscribers should be aware that their subscription does not include membership to the Association for Industrial Archaeology. For more information about how to join the Association please visit www.industrial-archaeology.org.uk.


Editorial Board

Editors:

Helen Gomersall (Halifax, UK)

Michael Nevell (University of Salford, UK)

 

Book Reviews Editor:

Professor Marilyn Palmer (Department of History and Archaeology, University of Leicester, UK)

 

Editorial Board:

Professor Jean-Yves Andrieux (Université de Rennes, France)

Professor R A Buchanan (University of Bath, UK)

Eusebi Casanelles (Museu de la Ciènca I de la Tècnica de Catalunya, Spain)

Professor Henry Cleere (University College London, UK and ICOMOS Paris, France)

Jose M. Lopes Cordeiro (Universidade do Minho, Portugal)

David Crossley (University of Sheffield, UK)

Keith Falconer (English Heritage, UK)

Axel Föhl (Rheinisches Amt für Denkmalpflege, Germany)

Piotr Gerber (University of Wroclaw, Poland)

Stephen Hughes (Royal Commission on Ancient and Historic Monuments, Wales, UK)

Nicholas Johnson (County Archaeologist for Cornwall, UK)

Professor Pat Martin (Michigan Technological University, USA)

Dr Miles Oglethorpe (Royal Commission on Ancient and Historic Monuments, Scotland, UK)

Dr Barrie Trinder (University College Northampton, UK)

Peter Wakelin (Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales, UK)

Ian West (University of Leicester, UK)




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