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dc:title "Description of 'Archaeological excavation report, E4318 Camp 5, County Kerry.'"@en;
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dc:title "Description of 'Archaeological excavation report, E4318 Camp 5, County Kerry.' as a web page"@en;
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dc:title "Description of 'Archaeological excavation report, E4318 Camp 5, County Kerry.' as Turtle (RDF)"@en;
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dc:title "Archaeological excavation report, E4318 Camp 5, County Kerry.";
dc:contributor "Hourihan, Stephen",
"Rubicon Heritage Services Ltd",
"Bartlett, Tony";
dc:creator "National Roads Authority";
dc:date "name=2011-03; start=2011-03-01;";
dc:description "This report presents the Final results of archaeological excavations carried out at Camp 5 in advance of the proposed N22 Tralee Bypass/ Tralee to Bealagrellagh road scheme in county Kerry. The proposed scheme has two main components, the N22 Tralee Bypass and the N22 Tralee to Bealagrellagh Road (Figure 1). The N22 Tralee Bypass extends from the N69 National Secondary Route approximately 4km north of Tralee town to the N70 National Secondary Route approximately 500 metres south of the town. It passes east of the town via the N21 National Primary Route and the proposed intersection with the N22 Tralee to Bealagrellagh Route (N22 Access Route). The N22 Tralee to Bealagrellagh road will provide a separate access route to Tralee from the N22 Killarney Road. Kerry National Road Design Office (NRDO) initially prepared a Route Constraints Report for this scheme in January 2000 (Kerry NRDO 2000). Following the completion of this report, six route options were identified. An environmental assessment of the Route Options was undertaken by RPSMCOS on behalf of Kerry NRDO and this formed part of the Route Selection Report in August 2002 (Kerry NRDO 2002). The preferred route, determined in the Route Appraisal and Selection Report was a combination of two of the originally proposed route options. In 2007 Kerry NRDO developed a number of route options as alternatives to Section A of the Bypass, these linked to the improved section of the N69 at Leath Cross. In 2007, Atkins prepared An Environmental Constraints Report for the Proposed Scheme Extension to N69 to Leath on behalf of Kerry NRDO. The Constraint Studies included archaeology and heritage and all identified issues and data in relation to this was used in the identification of route options in the Route Selection Report. Following route selection an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) was carried out on the entire length of the proposed road (Atkins 2008). The scheme was approved by An Bord Plean la (Ref. PL08 .HA0016) in September 2009. The project is funded by the Department of Transport under the National Development Plan 2007- 2013 and the Transport 21 programme. The total archaeological cost is administered by the National Roads Authority through Kerry County Council. Rubicon Heritage Ltd. was formerly known as Headland Archaeology (Ireland) Ltd. The company underwent a rebranding in December 2011. Reports written by the company prior to this date are referenced to Headland Archaeology (Ireland) Ltd in the bibliography, though for consistency the company is referred to as Rubicon Heritage Ltd. throughout this report. Archaeological test excavations (including wetland test excavation and targeted test excavation), a townland boundary survey, targeted geophysical survey, an underwater survey and an architectural/built heritage survey were undertaken along the entire route of the scheme Rubicon Heritage Services Ltd under Stage (i) of the Archaeological Services Contract (Bartlett et al. 2010a; Harrison 2010; Kieran and Hayden 2010; Long 2010 a-e). A total of 41 areas of archaeological potential were identified. Stage (ii) works on the scheme involved the mechanical stripping of topsoil, hand cleaning of exposed surfaces and mapping of features identified at each site of archaeological potential. This was carried out by Rubicon Heritage Services Ltd between 30 August and 13 October 2010 (Bartlett et al. 2010b). Following Stage (ii) investigations a total of 38 archaeological sites discovered during the course of works by Rubicon Heritage Services Ltd were recommended for Stage (iii) excavations in advance of construction works. An additional site in the townland of Camp (Camp 5) was identified during works by the NRA project archaeologist during additional testing in wetland areas, bringing the total number of sites to 39. Archaeological excavations were then undertaken by Rubicon Heritage Services Ltd at 35 of these sites between Monday the 24th January and Friday the 1st April 2011 under Stage (iii) of the Archaeological Services Contract. Post-excavation assessment reports were completed by August 2011 and a program of specialist analysis and dating was then undertaken. This report presents the final excavation results including the result of all specialist analysis and radiocarbon dating. NOTE: THE GRID REFERENCES PROVIDED IN THE FINAL REPORT PROVED INCORRECT. THE CORRECT GRID REFERENCES ARE INCLUDED IN THE METADATA.";
dc:format "application/pdf";
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dc:language "en";
dc:publisher "National Roads Authority",
"Transport Infrastructure Ireland";
dc:rights "Copyright and all related rights including moral rights in the reports and other documents provided by TII is owned by either the TII or the authors of the individual reports. Subject to the Disclaimer below, you may use or print copies of, and reproduce content from, these reports for your personal use or for educational or other non-commercial purposes provided that the copyright ownership is acknowledged. You may also include extracts from these reports in works from which you expect to derive commercial benefit or profit, provided however that you obtain the written permission of the TII to such use and that the copyright ownership is acknowledged. Please contact R¢n n Swan at Ronan.Swan@tii.ie for further information in this regard. (Disclaimer: Your use of any reports or any other materials provided is at your own risk. TII hereby expressly disclaims any warranty or representation that it has the right to licence the reports and other documents provided. TII further disclaims any liability with respect to the content of any materials provided, including but not limited to any errors or omissions which may be contained in such materials, any intellectual property rights, or the disclosure of confidential information.), Note 1: Some reports do not state ?Final Report? on the cover. However, until such time as a full and final report is available for a relevant site we are making alternative reports available. Note 2: In some cases more than 1 licence number may be included in a single report. R¢n n Swan, Head of Archaeology and Heritage, November 2015";
dc:spatial "Ireland",
"Kerry",
"https://www.logainm.ie/24403.aspx",
"east=85622; north=112940; projection=ING"^^dc:Point,
"east=485597.44; north=612994.35; projection=ITM"^^dc:Point;
dc:subject "archaeology",
"dating (measuring)",
"Archaeological excavation report",
"stratigraphic report",
"specialist report",
"Fulacht fia",
"N22 Tralee Bypass/Tralee to Bealagrellagh";
dc:temporal "name=Middle Bronze Age;",
"name=Bronze Age;",
"http://n2t.net/ark:/99152/p06hps8vvgz",
"name=Late Bronze Age;";
dc:type "text",
"Image",
"pdf";
edm:dataProvider "Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII)";
edm:provider "Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII)" .