Korean Translation to “Report on the Implementation Status of the Interpretation Strategy-Sites of Japan’s Meiji Industrial Revolution: Iron and Steel, Shipbuilding and Coal Mining(Japan)(ID:1484)” on 30 November 2020

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 153-193
Author(s):  
Hyo-Jung Yoon
1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom McLean

This paper examines the roles of accounting and costing in the management of coal mining during the Industrial Revolution in Britain, and considers the impact of the agent's reputation in the development and use of these systems.


1925 ◽  
Vol 35 (139) ◽  
pp. 470
Author(s):  
J. H. Clapham ◽  
T. S. Ashton

1991 ◽  
Vol 24 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 122-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Hayes

At a time when the Republican party in America seems to have abandoned its brief hopes of proclaiming a new paradigm, it may seem apropos to observe that old ones die hard—and not only in public life. A case in point from the scholarly world is the subject of this essay: the persistent historiographical notion of industrial factionalism. Throughout this century, students of German political economy have tended to see the country's business world as divided between two groupings. One comprises the classic heavy industries of the first Industrial Revolution and the Ruhr: coal, iron, and steel. Supposedly oriented toward domestic markets, burdened with high labor costs, doomed to flattening gains in productivity and profits, and habituated to hierarchy within their plants and the nation, executives in this grouping have figured in the historical literature as consistently and intransigently united against free trade, labor unions, and parliamentary government—indeed, against modernization itself.


2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 323
Author(s):  
Mansyur -

European Industrial Revolution in the eighteenth century brought great changes not only in Europe itself but also in other parts of the world including Indonesia which was used to be a country of Dutch colony. The invention of steam-powered ships triggered the Dutch to use steam-powered vessels as the alteration of yachts, wind-powered ships, in the 19th century. At the beginning, the steam-powered ships used rotating wheels in the left and right side; however, the ships finally used ordinary windmills or propellers. The decrease and the lack of this production was getting worsened the competition of other producer countries in world market and the unstable coal market and in crisis year in 1930, Pulau Laut Mining Company production dropped so that it was closed down in the same year.


Isis ◽  
1927 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-134
Author(s):  
Cecil H. Desch

1969 ◽  
Vol 184 (1) ◽  
pp. 1279-1289
Author(s):  
Henry Clay

Historically the making of iron and steel in any quantity was confined to places where fuel—originally wood carbon, but since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, coal—was cheap and local ore available, but even so the industry is such a large user of fuel that the need to conserve it has meant that the total energy concept has been understood in the integrated iron and steel works for at least 50 years. However, it was not until roughly 15 years ago that big improvements in ironmaking and major changes in steelmaking completely altered the fuel and energy balance of a modern works. These changes have been fostered by a rise in the price of coal compared with other fuels and compared with costs generally; also by the development of ‘tonnage’ oxygen plants and by the availability of bulk carriers for oil and ore. The effects on the fuel and energy balances are considered. Although in such a heavily capitalized industry widespread adoption of new processes is inevitably slow, still further changes can be foreseen and some of these may greatly affect the energy requirements of the steel works of the future. Natural gas may compete, not only with oil as a fuel, but also with coke as a reducing agent in making iron. Ore already reduced to iron may be shipped to the United Kingdom at a price that will make the integrated iron and steel works a thing of the past.


2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean M. Watson ◽  
Rob Westaway

As part of the Glasgow Geothermal Energy Research Field Site (GGERFS) project, intended as a test site for mine-water geothermal heat, the GGC-01 borehole was drilled in the Dalmarnock area in the east of the city of Glasgow, starting in November 2018. It was logged in January 2019 to provide a record of subsurface temperature to 197 m depth, in this urban area with a long history of coal mining and industrial development. This borehole temperature record is significantly perturbed away from its natural state, in part because of the ‘permeabilizing’ effect of past nearby coal mining and in part due to surface warming as a result of the combination of anthropogenic climate change and creation of a subsurface urban heat island by local urban development. Our numerical modelling indicates the total surface warming effect as 2.7°C, partitioned as 2.0°C of global warming since the Industrial Revolution and 0.7°C of local UHI development. We cannot resolve the precise combination of local factors that influence the surface warming because uncertainty in the subsurface thermal properties trades against uncertainty in the history of surface warming. However, the background upward heat flow through the shallow subsurface is estimated as only c. 28–33 mW m−2, depending on choice of other model parameters, well below the c. 80 mW m−2 expected in the Glasgow area. We infer that the ‘missing’ geothermal heat flux is entrained by horizontal flow at depth beyond the reach of the shallow GGC-01 borehole. Although the shallow subsurface in the study area is warmer than it would have been before the Industrial Revolution, at greater depths – between c. 90 and >300 m – it is colder, due to the effect of reduced background heat flow. In future the GGERFS project might utilize water from depths of c. 90 m, but the temperature of the groundwater at these depths is maintained largely by the past effect of surface warming, due to climate change and urban development; it is thus a resource that might be ‘mined’ but not sustainably replenished and, being the result of surface warming rather than upward heat flow, arguably should not count as ‘geothermal’ heat in the first place. Our analysis thus indicates that the GGERFS site is a poor choice as a test site for mine-water geothermal heat.Supplementary material: A summary history of coal mining in the study area is available at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.4911495.v2


1925 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 618
Author(s):  
M. B. ◽  
T. S. Ashton

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