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This article refers to:
The archaeology of industry; people and places

Palmer, M. & Orange, H. 2016. ‘The archaeology of industry; people and places’, Post-Mediev. Archaeol., 50, 73–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00794236.2016.1169812

The first paragraph in the Introduction (p. 73) should read:

INTRODUCTION: IN 1967

The British steel industry was re-nationalized by the Labour government led by Harold Wilson and the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust was established to preserve and interpret the remains of the Industrial Revolution across its six square miles (Fig. 1). This industrial site, declared a World Heritage Site among the first seven inscribed in the UK by UNESCO in 1986, provides a useful starting point for our consideration of the coverage of industrial archaeology in Post-Medieval Archaeology (PMA).

Additionally, the caption to Figure 1 (page 74) should read:

The Ironbridge Gorge, inscribed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986.

Taylor & Francis apologises for this error.

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