Irrawang Pottery

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Irrawang_Pottery

In 1833–56 James King established and ran a pottery at Irrawang in the lower Hunter Region in New South Wales (the site is now known as the Grahamstown Dam). The site of the Irrawang Pottery was excavated from August 1967 by students and volunteers under the umbrella of the , directed by Judy Birmingham. The work continued for over a decade and is still poorly published. Although originally conceived as a training exercise for archaeologists prior to their undertaking fieldwork in the Middle East the momentum generated by the project led to the establishment of the Australian Society for Historical Archaeology in 1970 and the introduction of a historical archaeology course at the University of Sydney in 1974. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Irrawang Pottery
xsd:integer 15531260
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rdf:langString In 1833–56 James King established and ran a pottery at Irrawang in the lower Hunter Region in New South Wales (the site is now known as the Grahamstown Dam). The site of the Irrawang Pottery was excavated from August 1967 by students and volunteers under the umbrella of the , directed by Judy Birmingham. The work continued for over a decade and is still poorly published. Although originally conceived as a training exercise for archaeologists prior to their undertaking fieldwork in the Middle East the momentum generated by the project led to the establishment of the Australian Society for Historical Archaeology in 1970 and the introduction of a historical archaeology course at the University of Sydney in 1974.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1857

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