The Ulster Archaeological Society
The Society is open to all. Its aim is "to advance the education of the public in archaeology and history, particularly in regard to Ulster". The Society organises a programme of free public lectures, as well as summer field trips to interesting sites, led by professional archaeologists. The Society publishes the Ulster Journal of Archaeology (founded in 1853) and a quarterly newsletter. Annual individual or family membership costs £20 (includes one journal). Retired £7.50 (without journal).
“Built a good brick house” - 300 years of change and development in the Belfast brick Industry
Excavations at Newmills, County Tyrone - Brian Sloan
Building Surveys of Five Vernacular Cottages from County Fermanagh
Feeding Carrickfergus: A Zooarchaeological Study - Judith Findlater
Re-discovering Nunneries in Medieval Ireland - Tracy Collins
Combining Archaeological and Documentary Sources for Late Medieval Churches in the North of Ireland
“If I had a hammer”: Bronze Age metalworkers and their tools
UAS Mapping Workshop
Community Excavations at Magilligan Military Training Estate, County Londonderry, 2021
An inherited place: Investigation of a late prehistoric settlement & famine cemetery in Downpatrick
Surprises at Stranmillis - Ruth Logue
3D simulation and Archaeological Enquiry: Measuring Astronomical Alignments in Neolithic Malta
Living on the Edge: Mining, Marginality and Materiality in Neolithic Shetland - Will Megarry
St. Mura’s Cross-Slab, Fahan, County Donegal: Community, Collaboration, Resilience - Kate Robb
Breathing Life into the Embers at Knock Iveagh: The Importance of Community Guardianship
On 'the Line' - Excavation of a Famine Road in Boho, County Fermanagh - Eileen Murphy
How Mike Baillie was right
UAS 2010 Field excursions
People, Pots and Pointy Things: A reassessment of Irish Bronze Age material culture (Part 3)
Discovery conferences 2017-2020
UAS 2018 Field excursions
A journey around the Barony of Kinelarty, Co. Down
People, Pots and Pointy Things: A Reassessment of Irish Bronze Age Material Culture (Part 2)
People, Pots and Pointy Things: A Reassessment of Irish Bronze Age Material Culture (Part I)
Animal Housing in Medieval Villages