Find background
Reference books can be
used to acquire basic information
on an unfamiliar concept or gather ideas for your paper topic.
Quick lookups:
AccessScience - dictionary
Practical Handbook of Marine Science - Science Reference GC11.2 .P73 2001
Glossary of Geology Online WC campus
Oxford Reference Online - More than 100 dictionaries
Longer explanations:
AccessScience - encyclopedia
Encyclopedia of Earth - peer-reviewed background articles
Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences - Science Reference q QE5 .E5137 1996
Encyclopedia of Ocean Sciences - Science Reference q GC9 .E57 2001
Encyclopedia of Volcanoes - Science Reference q QE522 .E53 2000
Treatise on Geochemistry
Geographic names:
USGS Geographic Names Information System
Popular articles:
Scientific American Archive -online interdisciplinary science magazine for the intelligent layperson - 1993-present
Scientific American 1986 - 1992 print edition, Science Classed Periodicals f T1 .S5
Scientific American 1912 - 1985 print edition, Off-Campus 5 [Storage]
Scientific American 1976 - 2003 Microfiche, Science Library
Find journal articles
The following databases provide either full-text articles or citations (information
about when and where the peer-reviewed article was published).
- Once you have a citation for
an article, use the Find
It! @ Wellesley
link
from each citation to search one or more electronic journal sources through
the Wellesley College Library Catalog.
- Use the name of the journal as the title
and make sure you look at the dates covered carefully!
- If Wellesley does not
own the article, you can request it via Interlibrary
Loan (ILL).
Major databases:
GeoRef is
the electronic bibliographic database of the American Geological Institute - covers articles in journals, maps,
chapters in books,
conference proceedings, dissertations,
and technical reports - for North American documents, dates back to 1785; for the rest of the world, back to 1933
Context-sensitive 'help' screens ; see 'Help & Support' on most GeoRef pages
JSTOR - electronic archive (back to first volume) of selected online journals, but they are always several years behind the current year/volume - JSTOR Tips & FAQs
Science
Direct - indexes more than 2,000 journals, often from volume one; online articles (= green icons) for several hundred scientific journals - 1995- present - Help pages
Web
of Science - interdisciplinary subject searching of scholarly articles in
the physical, life, and social sciences - also can search for articles that cite known
journal articles or books - 1965-present
Google Scholar - multidisciplinary coverage of peer-reviewed literature—
journal articles, theses, books, preprints - unspecified time coverage & breadth/depth of sources - complements but does not replace other searching - Advanced
Scholar Search Tips
See our A-Z
list for additional databases, or feel free to consult a Science Librarian for more help.
Selected journals
Electronic storage request form is attached to early years of several journals listed above --ones that are stored off-site. You can copy & paste desired journal title, Offcampus Location 5, and appropriate call number from this table into the linked storage request form above.
Find books
Wellesley
College Library Catalog
- tip: in the library catalog, start with keyword > choose a useful book > Full Record tab - follow the subject links to find more on that topic
- tip: to see the subscription details for a print journal or serial ['Lib has'] > Full Record tab.
WorldCat - Use WorldCat to
find books and other materials not at Wellesley. If you find a book you want that Wellesley does not own, you can use
the ILL link within WorldCat to request the book.
Key web sites
Volcanoes in U.S. federal agencies: NOAA - USGS - EPA
**Remember, you must evaluate web resources that you find with a search engine the same
way you would evaluate print sources**
- Accuracy: How factual is the web page? Are the facts well-documented?
- Authority: What are the professional credentials of the authors? Can you recognize the difference between a webpage author and a webmaster?
- Objectivity: Pros and cons? Are there conflicting interests? Is the page advocating a cause? Who is the intended audience?
- Currency: Is the page being updated regularly? How current is it now?
- Coverage: Does the page require special software to view it? Is there a fee to view it, or is it free? Is the information presented cited correctly?
- Ease of Use: Is the page easy to navigate? Are directions straightforward? If it is not easy to use, visitors will leave the site quickly.
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Return
to Research Guides by Subject: Geosciences [click on 'erupting volcano' photo to reach Hawaiian observatory]
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