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News from JURN

Monthly Archives: July 2018

Birmingham Museums Trust images are CC0

13 Friday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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All public domain Birmingham Museums Trust images are now CC0. Birmingham UK, not USA. The Trust will still make a charge for use of files larger than 3MB at 300dpi. Currently the site is still offering small and low Web-res pictures, but the Trust states they… “will introduce a new Digital Asset Management System in late 2019”, when presumably we’ll get new buttons to access large files. Until then, I’m guessing that one has to manually email them to ask for a larger CC0 version. The 3Mb barrier is a nice model, but AI upscaling of images will probably ensure that it only lasts a few years.

Burne-Jones, sketch for Theseus and the Minotaur in the Labyrinth.

Using Winrar to fix “the file name is too long” problem

12 Thursday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

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How to delete a Windows file when you have the “the file name is too long” problem”, and everything on your system is refusing to even allow a re-name of the file.

On desktop PCs the common WinRar .rar file-compression software can handle such extra-extra-long names, and can re-name them in its file-system viewer. Simply use WinRar as if it were a Windows file explorer, find the file, and rename to something shorter. Then delete it using your usual Windows File Explorer etc. WinRar is free for a 40-day trial.

‘Sort by date’ for Bookmarks in Opera

10 Tuesday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

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An excellent Recent Bookmarks Chrome addon, which shows your last 15 bookmarked sites in date-order and date-stamped, when you click on a toolbar icon. Very useful if your Web browser has the usual lacklustre Bookmarks system (hello, Firefox and Opera), but you don’t want to install a massive replacement just to get a simple “sort by date” function.

How to get a raw .XML display via the Opera Web browser (and very possibly other Web browsers too).

08 Sunday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

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Update, Jan 2019: XML display is now supported in the latest Opera.

One of the very few things I miss about the Firefox browser, having recently swopped to Opera, is the elegant and fast display of XML inside the browser as if it were a Web page.

Until a few weeks ago Opera was able to display XML as a formatted page, albeit in a very slow and unsatisfactory manner (i.e.: with no .MP3 links showing up). But now even that the feature seems to have expired altogether, after the new Opera update. An .XML page now never loads, even when my various addons are disabled. There’s no option to ‘View Source’ either, as the page hasn’t even loaded.

Of course, you can plug the .XML URL into a dedicated desktop feedreader, such as FeedDemon, but often you don’t want to go to the trouble of doing/loading that just to check a feed. Or you may have missed the feed’s update amidst the swirl of 10,000+ other feeds in FeedDemon, and the consequent need to regularly expire older posts and de-fragment the database.

So, in this use-case you’re casually using your browser’s bookmarks system, or else have just encountered a new .XML feed. And you just want a quick peek inside that XML link to see if there’s something new there, such as a new .MP3 podcast link. You may also want the find the actual direct .MP3 download file link, rather than some stream.

In which case, here’s a very simple way to get an .XML display via Opera, for a feed/page such as longnow.org/projects/seminars/SALT.xml


1. Install the Force Download extension in Opera. It’s really simple. Anything you paste in its URL bar gets downloaded rather than displayed/played in the browser.

2. Visit your .XML link with the Opera browser. Opera totally fails to render it as a page, or fails to render fully (e.g. not showing the raw .MP3 links). In that case, click the new ‘Force Download’ icon on your toolbar. The .XML page’s URL is auto-filled in Force Download, so there’s no need to copy-paste the URL. Click OK and the .XML file is then downloaded.

3. Still within the browser, you can now double-click on the completed download, and the .XML will be opened with whatever desktop software you normally use to view XML files. A 64-bit install of Notepad++ is going to be your quickest-loading option for viewing the .XML code.

As you can see below, at the top of the .XML there’s the latest enclosure, and if you’re not scared by looking at code then it’s easy to spot and copy the direct download link. Copy it back into ‘Force Download’ in your browser, and the .MP3 downloads directly.

If you can’t see the direct link because of the line-wrapping of the XML, click the “Word wrap” button in Notepad++ to fix that…

Once you have it set up, display of raw editable .XML should never be less than a second away from your browser. You can of course also use the same workflow for other file types.

I should also mention that there are two XML display addons for Opera, via the Chrome store. I tried XML Tree but it failed to work. XML Viewer stated that the API was not fully supported in Opera and anyway had such horrendous use terms (“Modify all data you copy and paste”) that I didn’t want to risk installing it in my browser.

OA search, group-test – Shakespeare “sonnet 71” sources

08 Sunday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

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It’s time for another in my series of group tests. The aim here is to test public tools used for keyword searching across open access (or otherwise free) academic papers, theses and/or books. The last such test was in December 2015, so it’s been over two years since the last one.

I decided to re-visit the humanities, combining history and literature with the search: Shakespeare “sonnet 71” sources. It’s not a sophisticated search, but rather the sort that a somewhat uncertain undergraduate might initiate.

‘Shakespeare’ is a big enough topic to give a range of results and test relevance ranking, but also tests if the engine can distinguish between Shakespeare’s Sonnet 71 and Sir Philip Sidney’s Sonnet 71 (ideally the search tool knows: ‘if searching for Shakespeare, user does not want results for Sidney’). Adding “sonnet 71” to the search query is specific enough to tell how many spurious links are being bundled with results (i.e.: ‘includes mention of a sonnet, but ermm… not 71’). Adding ‘sources’ as a kicker is intended to give semantics modules a slight challenge, because it might be that the searcher is looking for: i) the church and legal influences on the sonnet; or ii) is seeking articles on some of the many later creatives who have used the famous “sonnet 71” as their source. So it’s a tricksy search, even though it might appear straightforward.

I’ve included some new search tools in this test, new since the last group test in December 2015. The additions are the Chinese National Science Library’s GoOA; Dimensions; dissemin; the newly public 1findr (formerly oaFindr); and Elsevier’s ScienceOpen Search.

EconBiz was also included for completeness, even though it’s a business studies and economics search tool. It seems that Timothy McCallum’s nGram-based openaccess.xyz has been retired, and he’s now a blockchain consultant. The ACI Scholarly Blog Index has also been retired.

Web browser script-blockers and similar were turned off for the tests.


JURN group test: Shakespeare “sonnet 71” sources
 
July 2018. Searching for free full-text academic articles, book chapters, dissertations/theses or other substantial content in English. I clicked through on possible results and evaluated.
OpenDOAR –   Appears to no longer offer full-text search across repositories? A version 2.0 is now online, and I guess we may see the full-text search capability return in future? In the meanwhile, your alternative is Graft.
EconBiz 0   Zero from zero results. All fields, searched for ‘Open Access Only’. To be fair, I should note that EconBiz is only meant for business and economy search.
GoOA 0   Used the Chinese-language interface, toggled it to a ‘keyword’ search. Zero from among a slew of hard science results.
Q-Sensei 0   0 from zero results. Got the message “Sorry an error has occured”. Tried several other browsers, with the same result. Defunct?
WorldWideScience 0   No results. Possibly due to a cause indicated by the message: “Adobe Flash Player is missing”. I wasn’t willing to compromise my security by installing Flash, so this source went untested. Why would anyone need a legacy plugin like Flash just to serve search results?
JournalSeek 0   Zero results, from four results. To be fair I should mention that JournalSeek is focussed on science and is meant to find journals themselves, rather than their articles.
DOAJ 0   Used ‘Article’ search. 0 from zero results. A simpler Shakespeare sonnet sources also had no results. I had to cut right back to just Shakespeare sonnet to get even 14 results, which were on-topic but not relevant to the original search for Sonnet 71.
dissemin 0   0 from zero results.
JournalTOCS 0   Search by keyword. Zero from zero results.
Paperity 0   Sorted by Relevance (default). Checked first 30 results. 12 appeared to be generally relevant to Shakespeare. Four short and straightforward stage-play reviews, and one spurious result, were discounted. Of the remaining, three were about using Shakespeare to teach maths, another was a tangential book review on posthumanism. Of the rest, the PDFs were downloaded, and a search for ‘sonnet’ in each PDF gave zero results.
British Library EThOS 0   0 from zero results.
OpenAIRE 0   0 from zero results.
Microsoft Academic 0   0 from two results. One result was on Sir Philip Sidney (who also wrote a Sonnet 71), the other on John Benson. Both were on Project Muse, and both were paywalled with a “Purchase from JHU Press” message.
Ingenta Connect 0   Zero from zero results. Searched by ‘Article title, keywords or abstract’ + ‘OA only’, and also tried ‘All free’. ‘All’ also produced zero results.
Google News 0   Google News can be surprisingly useful for triangulating contemporary aspects of one’s search topic, by surfacing notices of exhibitions, conferences, projects, obituaries and publicity for new books. But for this search it could only inform me that a range of the key manuscripts of British literature had been on show in China in the spring of 2018, along with relics and books used by the first Chinese translators of Shakespeare.
ScienceOpen Search 0   Zero relevant results. Removed the “in last week” filter, and switched to ‘Relevance’ ranking of results. Checked first 30 results. 13 were in some way relevant to Shakespeare, though with a distinct slant toward medical topics. Top results included: a comedic faux-managerial ‘assessment’ of The Globe Theatre; a note from the Indian Medical Gazette of 1877; a half-page review on the Ulster Medical Journal of 1959; a medical student’s mock-Shakespearean comedy skit from 1989. A later result, “Searching for Shakespeare in the Stars” examined the science knowledge evidence in Shakespeare for clues to the ‘real’ authorship, but did not discuss Sonnet 71. Other results were short book reviews in medical journals. A late result was “Automatic Compositor Attribution in the First Folio of Shakespeare” on an automated bibliographic detection process. “Did William Shakespeare and Thomas Kyd Write Edward III?” took a digital humanities approach to Edward III. “Language Individuation and Marker Words: Shakespeare and His Maxwell’s Demon” was another digital humanities project, sweeping across words plucked from “168 plays from the Shakespearean era”.
Mendeley 0   Searched ‘Papers’ only. Zero results. Tried again with ‘sonnet’ rather than ‘sonnet 71’. Then had two results, one on Milton, and the other rather interesting: “Shakespeare, plants, and chemical analysis of early 17th century clay ‘tobacco’ pipes from Europe”. Apparently cannabis and coca leaves could be detected! Though full-text and under full CC, this sadly proved to be a one-page ‘Correspondence’ letter and had no mention of the Sonnets.
CORE 0   Zero from 30 results. Filtered by “full-text only”. Looked at the first 30 results. CORE’s semantics module is obviously still rather primitive, but 23 results were generally relevant to Shakespeare in some way. One possible item, “Searching for Shakespeare in the Stars”, had already been found and discounted. A half dozen classroom items from Education Studies were discounted e.g. “Shakespeare for all ages and stages”, “Introductory guidance for teachers”, etc. Six likely PDFs were downloaded. None were relevant, though the article “Small Latine and Lesse Greeke? Shakespeare and the Classical Tradition” was of some background interest.
Digital Commons Network (BePress) 0   3 results for the first pass, none seeming to be useful. I tried again with simply ‘sonnet’ and then filtered results for ‘English Language and Literature’. Looked at first 30 results, and investigated the undergraduate dissertation “The Bard and The Word: the influence of the Bible on the writings of William Shakespeare” and the paper “Missing Shakespeare’s Law: Some Writing about Some Reading about Close Reading”. Neither proved directly useful, though hinted toward Church language and legal phrasing as possible influences on some of the Sonnets.
OAlib 0   Zero from 30 checked results. First three results looked good, actually being about Shakespeare’s sonnets (though not Sonnet 71). Results came in tens and by the second and third page wildly off-topic biomedical results were creeping in, but the other results were broadly on-topic for Shakespeare. 12 likely results were further investigated. But… the top result went to ojs.academypublisher.com, a domain now ‘404’ and for sale. The second and third results went to “Internal Server Error”. So much for the promising first three results. The majority of the other papers were about later receptions and re-workings of Shakespeare plays rather than poetry. A short 2003 article “A Few Hints To Approach Shakespeare’s Works” in Literatura y Linguistica No. 14 would have provided a very useful short grounding for a sixth-former or undergraduate new to Shakespeare, but was not specifically relevant to the search.
BASE 0   Zero results, so I tried again with just ‘Sonnet’ rather than ‘Sonnet 71’. I then filtered results by ‘Open Access’ and checked the first 30 results. Relevance seemed to be excellent at first glance, though translation featured strongly in later results and by the third page the relevance had tricked away. Six likely candidates were chosen for testing. The first was blocked with “Embargoed Content”. A possibly interesting discussion of Shakespeare’s sonnets 78–86 was blocked by a paywall at Oxford Academic. “L’art de Shakespeare dans les Sonnets” proved to be in French. The DOI’s at 10.1093/nq/17.4.132-b and 10.1093/nq/192.25.548-g were both ‘404’ dead. The final link claimed be a PDF archive of a page of Web links on ‘Social Issues for High School students’ in relation to Shakespeare, but failed to be what it claimed.
OATD 0   Zero results. Tried again with just ‘sonnets’ and had three results, only one of which was relevant, the undergraduate B.A. dissertation “Metaphors of Time : Mortality and Transience in Shakespeare’s Sonnets” which looked specifically at Sonnets 60, 64 and 65. But this dissertation seemed very short (abridged?), and though it tried to present some background and concepts it could not be called a valid ‘hit’.
SciLit 0   Zero results, so I tried again with just ‘sonnet’. Filtered by ‘Open Access’, giving three results, none relevant.
NDLtd 0   Zero results, checked first 30 results. Some off-topic science articles (by science researchers with the surname Shakespeare), but otherwise broadly relevant to Shakespeare and his sources. Five likely items were examined. The book Le Vers de Shakespeare looked possible, if in French, but was anyway found not to be available in full-text. Shakespeare’s books: a dissertation on Shakespeare’s reading and the immediate sources of his works (1904) had a link which went to Archive.org. After making a search of this book, the searcher would have had no luck — but would have been made aware of the need to also search for Roman numerals (e.g. ‘Sonnet XXI’) in pre-1930s material on Shakespeare.
1findr (formerly oaFindr) 1   Zero results. When just ‘sonnet’ was used, there were 13 search results in Open Access. Relevance was good, with “‘Subject to Invent’: Adaptations of Shakespeare’s Sonnets into other Media” being top, and this offered a stimulating overview that would be useful enough (to a certain type of artist-creative searcher, looking for past examples of adaptations) be counted as a ‘hit’. The article “A Previously Unreported Source for Shakespeare’s Sonnet 56” proved to be paywalled.
Dimensions 1   1 from three results. Filtered for ‘Open Access’ only. One article, from the International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature, had a passing remark on Sonnet 71.
SHARE 1   Sorted by Relevance | Publication. Top five results were to the text of Sonnet 71 itself, but, on clicking through: “Users without a subscription are not able to see the full content”. Otherwise relevancy was strong. Looked at first 30 results. There was some free material, a couple which claimed to be on JSTOR Free (if you sign up). Of these, a review of “Shakespeare’s Books: A Dictionary of Shakespeare Sources” and a review of “The Foreign Sources of Shakespeare’s Works. An Annotated Bibliography of the Commentary written on this Subject between 1904 and 1940” might have provided useful references. The 1957 book Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare was declared un-purchasable, but had a preview PDF with a possibly useful bibliography and index. I lumped these three marginal results together and feeling generous counted them as a combined “1” score. The DOI link to the book “A Shakespeare Reader: Sources and Criticism” was ‘404 not found’ at Springer. “Breath, Today: Celan’s Translation of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 71” looked very interesting, but was firmly paywalled. “Scoping Shakespeare, costume and performance; approaches, sources and interpretations” was a nice free backgrounder article, but not relevant. Overall, SHARE seems worth a look when doing a search. The relevancy was good, and there was some genuinely free content (for those prepared to dig past broken DOIs and suchlike).
PQDT Open 1   Sorted by relevancy. The first 30 results were all broadly on-topic for Shakespeare. Top results had a focus on the comedies, youth culture and contemporary staging, all variously reflecting the fact that that PQDT is strong on searches of undergraduate dissertations. “Couplets and sententia in Shakespeare’s sonnets” had some discussion of Sonnet 71, just enough to count as a hit.
FreeFullPDF 5   The original search query gave no results, and so Shakespeare “sonnet 71” proved the only feasible search here, giving 49 results. FreeFullPDF is known to include the likes of academypublication.com, and users need to be wary. Though in this case the said ‘publisher’ did manage to offer the reasonably on-topic and highly polished “The Tragic Vision in the Fair Youth Group in Shakespeare’s Sonnets”, which ranked highly. “First and Final Things: Shakespeare’s Sonnet 145, and his Epitaph” discusses Sonnet 71 in the context of the poet’s epitaph and Stratford-upon-Avon and could have nudged a student toward a useful bit of topographical grounding for their essay. “Shakespeare’s Sonnets in Russian” discusses a prose translation of 71. Confusion with Sir Philip Sidney’s Sonnet 71 added a couple of spurious results. “The cognitive poetics of literary resonance” appeared again, and having been previously seen I knew it had a useful commentary on 71. “Echoes of Desire” was a Cornell University book liberated by the National Endowment for the Humanities, and proved to offer some slight comment on “Shakespeare’s Sonnet 71” (page 128) amid a general overview of Petrarch and “Petrarchan elements in the sonnets”. The article “Autor des Sonnets” appeared at first to be French but proved to be English and to have some perceptive and quotable comments on Sonnet 71: “You can hear the bell all along these lines [in 71]. A sonnet is a bell ringing. Once the bell is in motion you cannot make it stop. Slow it down only. It has to exhaust itself in time.” The open book Love and its Critics: From the Song of Songs to Shakespeare and Milton’s Eden has mention of a Sonnet 71 — but it proved to be Sir Philip Sidney’s Sonnet 71.
Google Scholar 7   I removed citations and patents from search results. There is no way to filter Scholar for ‘Open Access Only’, so the first 100 results were examined. This gave Scholar a good chance to pop out some OA links. “The cognitive poetics of literary resonance” was available in full-text from Academia.org and had three pages of detailed discussion of Sonnet 71. “”71″ by William Shakespeare” was also in full-text, though proved to be a very short and under-researched undergraduate term-paper. “Teaching Shakespeare’s Sonnets: Time as Fracture in Sonnets 18, 60, 73” was full-text, on-topic in theme and had some passing discussion of 71. “A Light in the Darkness: Imagery of Light in Shakespeare’s Sonnets” was a good Japanese paper, but had only the briefest mention of 71. “”Couplets and sententia in Shakespeare’s sonnets” reappeared again (it had been seen before), and was counted as a marginal ‘hit’. A couple of later papers were on translations, which also revealed that the Turkish version has been successfully set to music. “Music In Shakespeare” has some mention of Sonnet 71 in the context of Arthurian tales of courtly love, and presents the idea that this sonnet might have originally been been imagined as being sung to music. (However, that article was on the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship website, which champions the fringe idea that Shakespeare was not the author of his works. As such, it isn’t indexed by JURN). Then way down on page 10 of the results there was “Shuffling off this mortal coil. A Shakespearean perspective on death and dying” at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Given the subject matter of Sonnet 71 this would be very useful background context for an undergraduate. All in all, seven useful ‘hits’.
JURN 10   Looked at first 30 results, sorted for ‘Relevance’. The top result “Shakespeare and Philosophical Criticism” had a long discussion of Sonnet 71. The next two were on French and Russian translations, each with a mention of 71. “In Sleep a King” (chapter 5 of a monograph) has many pages of high-quality discussion on 71, including sources which might offer “a vein of medieval Christian teaching and belief in this sonnet” and a discussion of possible influence from legal terminology on the sonnet. “Teaching Shakespeare’s Sonnets: Time as Fracture in Sonnets 18, 60, 73” reappeared again, having been seen previously. There was a duplicate of the top result, “Shakespeare and Philosophical Criticism”, in the form of the entire book which held it. Various other ‘hits’, already seen and checked, appeared.

While not offering the prettiest-looking set of search results, JURN offered the highest quality and most sustained discussions of Sonnet 71, and these ranked highly. The main problems with this set of results in JURN were:

1) usefulness (or not) was sometimes obscured behind vague link-titles (e.g. Springer’s free-sample chapters from books tend to have the plain and un-alluring link-title of “Copyrighted material”. Snippets of the full-text do give useful additional hints on these, but the snippets can mislead if part of an index.

2) despite Google’s semantic and name-authority prowess, everyone’s favourite search behemoth confused Shakespeare’s Sonnet 71 and Sidney’s Sonnet 71 rather too many times for my liking. This could, of course, be solved with a -“Sidney” search command and other adjustments of the search terms.

3) I would have liked to see the article “Shuffling off this mortal coil. A Shakespearean perspective on death and dying” in the top 30. It’s indexed in JURN but it’s not surfaced by this particular search. Even Google Scholar, however, shoved it down to page 10 of their results. Perhaps there’s something in the algorithms that says ‘ncbi.nlm.nih.gov = science and biomedical, do not mix with humanities results’. “First and Final Things: Shakespeare’s Sonnet 145, and his Epitaph” would have also been nice to see, for its discussion of 71, but I’m guessing that the obscure Italian siba-ese.unisalento.it server is poorly ranked.

JURN could have had a couple more reasonably on-topic results, if I had indexed: i) a questionable publisher; and ii) a fringe website which champions the idea that Shakespeare was not the author of his works. But that would be to dilute the results with the sort of material that an undergraduate would not be savvy enough to be wary of.

itty.bitty

07 Saturday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

itty.bitty, new from the design leader at Dropbox. Itty.bitty uses the URL to contain the text of a Web page. The page can have 2,000 bytes, or about 170-200 words, if you’re going to support legacy Web browsers such as Internet Explorer.

No hosting server is required, and as the data sits after the # symbol. What comes after the # is meant to be page-position related, and as such it never gets sent to the server.

The base64 link code is not pretty…

But the same link/page displays as…

How it works

This link is the page.

Scripting and hyper-linking is enabled in such pages, so long as it all fits in the URL length. The code can’t do images, but you can do old-school ASCII-art.

The main drawback seems to be that you’re going to have to be 1000% sure that your text is exactly as you want it before you make the link… because there’s no after-post editing for errors or updating of dead hyperlinks in the page.

In which case you’d ideally consistently version and date-stamp the

">How it works

bit, as…

">How it works (v.0.1 | 14/07/2018)

…so that people and search-tools can discover later updated versions of the same content. Otherwise the itty.bitty system risks becoming an intertwingled mess of half-baked and old/broken stuff that you (and probably Google) won’t want in search results.

I’m guessing that advanced Web browsers such as Brave will soon ‘add a feature’ in relation to this, by enabling much longer data-carrier code to be read from URLs. Perhaps also some simple automatic “…and can we find a later version of this itty.bitty.site?” query, done inside the browser. There would, however, also have to be some sort of dynamic ownership hash embedded in the page, to protect against impersonation of the page-author. Perhaps the system of authoring an ownership-hash and datestamp could be combined into a simple ‘one-click operation’ in a desktop authoring tool.

Anyway, it’s one example of the coming uncensorable Decentralized Web.

When ‘open’ is closed

05 Thursday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in Ooops!

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Ooops…

Impact of Open Offices on Collaboration (Royal Society)…

Contrary to common belief, the volume of face-to-face interaction decreased significantly (approx. 70%) in both cases [in ‘open’ offices], with an associated increase in electronic interaction. In short, rather than prompting increasingly vibrant face-to-face collaboration, open architecture appeared to trigger a natural human response to socially withdraw from officemates and interact instead over email and IM.

Added to JURN

02 Monday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in Ecology additions, New titles added to JURN

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Japan Review (The Japan Institute of International Affairs)


Proceedings of the United States National Museum (to 1968)

Animal Systematics, Evolution, Diversity

GRAFT updates

02 Monday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in New titles added to JURN

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GRAFT has just had another tranche of new URLs added to its index. GRAFT searches across all university repositories, full-text and records alike.

JURN Directory updates

02 Monday Jul 2018

Posted by futurilla in New titles added to JURN

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The JURN Directory has updated. Please refresh any local PDF copies you may be holding.

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