This is an archive of past requests. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new request or revive an old one, please do so on the Resource Request page.
Got it, many thanks. I was of course aware of the Wikipedia Library and have used it frequently, but I was not aware of this particular collection. --Viennese Waltz07:55, 13 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Cohen, Albert (1987). "Jean Marius' Clavecin brisé and Clavecin à maillets Revisited: The "Dossier Marius" at the Paris Academy of Sciences". Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society. 13: 23–38.
1. * Dhondup, Yeshi (2014). The Story of Golden Corpse. Dharamsala: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives. pp. 53-62 (Tale "The Girl Langa Langchung and the Rooster"). ISBN9788186470886.
For The White Bird and His Wife. According to Damdinsuren and Lazslo Lörinc, the tale is part of the Siddhi-Kur compilation, whose versions are numerous. I plan to break off the Tibetan variants to another article, since the tale and the compilation, numerous versions that there are, are known in Tibet, Kalmyk, Mongolia and Oirat.
2. * Dhondup, Yeshi (2014). The Story of Golden Corpse. Dharamsala: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives. pp. 63-70 (Tale "The Girl Soka and her Kind Horse"). ISBN9788186470886.
This one is for "The Horse Lurja". "Girl Soka" is the translation of a Tibetan tale titled "Bu-mo So-kha", who Lorincz and Damdinsuren source to a Tibetan version of "Siddhi-Kur".
The first one is searchable on HathiTrust, and my university has it in print. I'm planning to stop by the library in a couple of hours, so if you'd like, I can access it there or check it out, and send you relevant pages.
The second one is searchable (at least for me) on Google Books, and I can request a scan via inter-library loan.
Solomon Ucko, that's very generous of you! I think we are divided by geography, unfortunately—HaithiTrust tells me 'This item is not available online — Limited - search only — due to copyright restrictions. Learn More', which isn't so helpful :) If you can search it, I'm looking for references to "Tommy Wood" or "Woods". Of the second one, Gbooks lets me see a snippet, which is on p.769. Perhaps you could screenshot the page, if you can see that too? Anyway, don't put yourself to too much trouble—I really appreciate the research you've done! ——Serial Number 5412916:41, 8 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Got it. I can't see the whole thing on HathiTrust, but I can search for terms and see which pages they occur on and how often, as with virtually all books on HathiTrust. I think you should be able to also? Anyways, it says that "Tommy Woods" appears on pp. 54 and 248. Should I find the print copy in my university's library and photograph and send you those pages?
As for the second one, I can only see snippets, but I can request a scan of that page and the surrounding pages if you'd like.
@Serial Number 54129: Yeah, of course! I've requested a scan of pp. 768-770 of The IRA in the twilight years, and I'll get Irish Politics and the Spanish Civil War when I get a chance, maybe in an hour or two.
@Sollyucko: I'm not that experienced at this, but for "The IRA in the Twilight Years", please explain why not just use the web archive copy. I will note that if you paste the title directly into archive.org, it won't find a match, it seem that a little extra effort when searching for sources can pay off. Fabrickator (talk) 01:27, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, good find, thanks! That looks like the same thing, so I've canceled my ILL request.
* By default, this is a metadata search... meaning it looks at the title, author, etc.
* I haven't tested whether the metadata search is an "and" or an "or" search.
* You can select a "full text" search ... it is in fact very handy, but seems to be just an "or" search, so it will match on every page which has any of the search terms.
* I haven't tested, but when doing a metadata search, I quote what I'm searching for.
* I have found that colons in metadata searches often cause non-matches, I suspect they have a particular syntactic meaning, but I haven't verified this.
* In the case of this specific search, I also dropped off the range of years at the end of the title. Notice that includes a hyphen, perhaps that creates a problem, or maybe there's just some variation in the spacing that causes the problem.
* You might consider removing other punctuation as well.
Here's the relevant text in Irish Politics and the Spanish Civil War:
Potential recruits had first been vetted by the CPI which selected suitable volunteers for service. Volunteers were rejected for various reasons — age, physical or mental condition, political unsuitability, as well as importance to the party. Twenty-one year-old Bob Doyle, rejected by the CPI because of his youth, [...].28 Others such as seventeen-year-old Tommy Woods lied about their ages.29
— p. 54
Appendix 1: International Brigades* [...] * Sources include miscellaneous newspapers, Irish government records, Spanish military and government records, International Brigade Archives, memoirs, biographies and histories. [...] † represents killed in action. Where possible to verify place of birth has been supplied; where place of birth is unknown, last known residence has been listed. [... pages ... ] Tommy Woods † / Dublin
— pp. 245, 248
Sorry that I took longer than expected; I photographed the pages yesterday but didn't have a chance to send you the content until now. Sorry that I forgot to check the endnotes; I can easily go back for them at some point in the next couple days if they'd be potentially useful to you.
Thanks Sollyucko, that's great stuff! I hope you didn't type all that out by hand :) I'm sorry you went to all that trouble for such a small amount of information, but it's always a gamble what we'll find, isn't it? I was able to use it though. Thanks again! ——Serial Number 5412917:07, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Kaufman, P. B. (1959). "Development of the shoot of Oryza sativa L. III. Early stages in histogenesis of the stem and ontogeny of the adventitious root". Phytomorphology. New Delhi: International Society of Plant Morphologists: 382-404. ISSN0031-9449.
Hermann-Otto, Elisabeth (2012). "Temporini-Gräfin Vitzthum, Hildegard". In Peter Kuhlmann; Helmuth Schneider (eds.). Geschichte der Altertumswissenschaften. Biographisches Lexikon. pp. 1217–1218. ISBN978-3-476-02033-8.
Heinen, Heinz (2005). "Hildegard Temporini-Gräfin Vitzthum, 1939–2004". Historia. 54.
I'm interested in Jennifer Lynne Michael: The ring of voices. Rounds from Anglo-American tradition. Dissertation. Thesis (M.A. in Folklore)--University of California, Berkeley, Dec. 1988. As far as I can see, this book is only available in some U.S. libraries: Berkeley ([1]), Mississippi ([2]). However, GoogleBooks has it ([3]) and HathiTrust has it ([4]).
I am interested in the whole book if possible, but especially in everything concerning the song (catch, round): Hey ho, nobody home and its variations: "Hejo, spann den Wagen an" (German) as well as "Nose, nose, nose, nose" resp. "Rose, rose, rose, rose" and "Ah poor bird".
The request is for the German article de:Hejo, spann den Wagen an but could also be useful for an English article about "Hey ho, nobody home".
Unfortunately, this doesn't seem to be on ProQuest. Based on Google Books and HathiTrust searches for all of those titles, it looks like the relevant pages are: iv, 6, 31, 71-74, 238, 243, 248, 252, 255, 258, 262, 302, 346. If no-one else can do it for a few days, ping me and I'll try to request a scan via interlibrary loan of pp. "iv,6,31,70-75,237-263,302,346" (there seems to be a 30-character limit).
Greetings, has someone access to "Hawkins, Stephen J., B. D. Russell, and Peter A. Todd, eds. "Oceanography and Marine Biology: An annual review. Volume 61." (2023)."?
For Cadamosto Seamount
If you have reason to believe that the non-open-access chapters contain useful content, let me know and I'll look for them some more, then request an ILL if I can't find them.
Hmm. My question is essentially whether the open-access chapter fiveby pointed out is the only chapter that discusses Cadamosto in the whole book. If yes, this is resolved. If no, I'd like to have the others too. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 08:24, 8 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It looks like that chapter does contain everything Google Books finds, except for the index, which points to page 159, which is in that chapter. I think this is resolved, then?
P.S. Here's a complete citation; I don't know why the page numbers are inconsistent:
Tricart, Jean (1968–1970). "Le Salar del Huasco. (Etude géomorphologique)" [The Salar del Huasco (A geomorphological study)]. Revue de Géomorphologie Dynamique (in French). 19 (2). Paris, France: Société d'Edition d'Enseignement Supérieur (SEDES) or CDU: 48/49 – 78/84/92/93. ISSN0556-7432.
Google Books has the journal, but the search results are limited.
My university has the journal (OCLC1764047) in print, but the catalog says the earliest they have is vol. 20. I'll double-check that myself when I get a chance, but if I can't find it there, I'll request an interlibrary loan for it.
I didn't find it there, so I've requested an interlibrary loan for it. I'm not sure what's up with the pages, so I've included the broadest possible range, pp. 48-93, just in case. The WorldCat entries say there's a map, so I've put "48-93 + map" for pages, and hopefully they'll include it.
Greetings, has someone access to "Czajka, Willi. Rezente und pleistozäne Verbreitung und Typen des periglazialen Denudationszyklus in Argentinien. Societas geographica Fenniae, 1955."?
For Pastos Grandes.
I've attempted to request an interlibrary loan for "Lost bones: In search of Wesley Hurt’s Mammoth, Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument’s Quarai Unit, central New Mexico", but it I'm not sure if it'll work, since recent issues are online-only, which are often not loanable. I also found an extended abstract at [13]. BTW, HathiTrust has "The 1939-1940 excavation project at Quarai pueblo and mission buildings : Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument, New Mexico" by Wesley R. Hurt in the public domain.
I have access to the full text of "Whole-rock 40Ar/39Ar geochronology, geochemistry, and stratigraphy of intraplate Cenozoic volcanic rocks, central Mongolia", but searching it finds no mention of "Taryatu" nor "Chulutu". I do see some mentions of "Tariat", though: (plus some context)
PETROLOGIC SUMMARY OF BASALTIC VOLCANISM IN CENTRAL MONGOLIA
Cenozoic volcanic rocks in Mongolia are part of a diffuse volcanic province in central Asia encompassing northern China and Siberia in the Baikal rift area (Whitford-Stark, 1987; Yarmolyuk et al., 1991; Barry and Kent, 1998). [...] Based on La/Yb versus Dy/Yb trends, the older Tariat magmas may have been derived by 4% partial melting at ~90 km depth, and an Orkhon magma may have been generated by 2%–4% decompression melting from the garnet field into the spinel field (Hunt et al., 2012).
[...]
The most recent geochemical study in the region was completed by Hunt et al. (2012), who studied basaltic rocks in the northern and eastern Hangay Mountains. [...] They interpreted younger magmas of Togo to reflect mixing of magmas from this source and a metasomatized enriched lithospheric source, and the youngest Tariat magmas to have phlogopite in the source region, indicating a shallowing of the melting region over time. [...]
— p. 1399
Hunt, A.C., Parkinson, I.J., Harris, N.B.W., Barry, T.L., Rogers, N.W., and Yondon, M., 2012, Cenozoic volcanism on the Hangai dome, central Mongolia: Geo-chemical evidence for changing melt sources and implications for mechanisms of melting: Journal of Petrology, v. 53, no. 9, p. 1913–1942, https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egs038.
Ionov, D., 2002, Mantle structure and rifting processes in the Baikal-Mongolia region: Geophysical data and evidence from xenoliths in basalts from Tariat, Mongolia: [page break] Tectonophysics, v. 351, p. 41–60, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0040-1951(02)00124-5.
I've received a PDF of "Lost bones: In search of Wesley Hurt’s Mammoth, Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument’s Quarai Unit, central New Mexico". The only mention of Tahoka is in a citation:
Hall, S.A., 2001, Geochronology and paleoenvironments of the glacial-age Tahoka Formation, Texas and New Mexico High Plains: New Mexico Geology, v. 23, p. 71–77.
— p. 62
This is only cited in:
The first phase is represented by a period of erosion along the margins of the drainage with the growth of small, thin alluvial fans at the base of the Pleistocene river terrace (Unit I, Fig. 6A). However, the exact timing of this event is unknown. It is plausible that the first phase occurred before the LGM, because most paleoclimate proxies for that time indicate a warmer and dryer pre-LGM climate (Harris, 1989; Hall, 2001, 2005; Metcalfe et al., 2002; Rachal et al., 2021).
— p. 60
Let me know if you'd find additional context for this useful.
Greetings, has someone access to "Garcés I (2000) Geochemistry of Huasco salar, Chile. Origin of solutes and brine evolution. In: Geertman RM (ed.), Proceedings of the 8th World Salt Symposium 2: 1159-1160."?
For Salar del Huasco.
Greetings, has someone access to "Nielsen, Axel E. "Tendencias de larga duración en la ocupación humana del altiplano de Lípez (Potosí, Bolivia)." Cremonte, María Beatriz (comp.), Los desarrollos locales y sus territorios. Arqueología del NOA y del sur de Bolivia, Jujuy, UNJu (1998): 65-102."?
For Pastos Grandes.
@Jo-Jo Eumerus: Actually, Google Books and HathiTrust show that Google Books shows the only relevant snippet, so I've canceled my ILL request. Are you able to see the snippet?
@Jo-Jo Eumerus: I've already received it. Here are the relevant parts:
Oscillatoria with 34 species was the most commonly occurring genus. It was followed by the filamentous genera: Phormidium with 18 species, Lyngbya with 16 species and Anabaena with 10 species. Such observations have also been made in a previous study made on the species diversity of blue-green algae at the coast of Balochistan (Shameel, 2001b) and also in Salar de Huasco, a high altitude saline wetland in northern Chile (Dorador et al., 2008).
— p. 259
Dorador, C., I. Vila, J.F. Imhoff & K.-P. Witzel. 2008. Cyanobacterial diversity in Salar de Huasco, a high altitude saline Wetland in northern Chile: an example of geographical dispersion. FEMS Microbiol. Evol.64(3): 419-432.
Greetings, has someone access to "Encalada, D. P., Larrea, P., Loaiza, C. C., Salinas, S., Godoy, B., & le Roux, P. (2023, July). Back arc or main arc? Decoding monogenetic magmatism in the Central Andes: a case study from El Negrillar volcanic field, Chile. In Goldschmidt 2023 Conference. GOLDSCHMIDT."
For El Negrillar-La Negrillar
The only mention I can find of "Back arc or main arc? Decoding monogenetic magmatism in the Central Andes: a case study from El Negrillar volcanic field, Chile." is in Google Scholar, with no links or citations.
Here are the closest things I found: [16] and [17]+[18] have lists of links to the first author's abstracts at that conference or conference series, respectively. [19] has a list of links to abstracts at that conference series that mention Negrillar in their title.
Greetings, has someone access to "Ericksen, G. E. "Upper Tertiary and Quaternary continental saline deposits in the central Andean region." Geological Association of Canada Special Paper 40 (1993): 89-102."?
For Pastos Grandes.
Greetings, has someone access to "Núñez, Lautaro, and Juan Varela. "Complejo pre agrícola en el Salar del Huasco." Estudios Arqueológicos 2."?
For Salar del Huasco.
Nuñez Atencio, Lautaro; Varela B., Juan (1966). "Complejo pre-agrícola en el Salar del Huasco (prov. de Tarapacá)". Estudios Arqueológicos. 2. Antofagasta: Universidad de Chile: 9–24. ISSN0425-3450. OCLC2446765.
If you'd rather avoid Sci-Hub, I've sent you "K–Ca–Mg binary cation exchange in saline soils from the north of Chile", which I downloaded directly from CSIRO through my university libraries' apparently partial subscription.
"Synopsis of the genus Atriplex (Amaranthaceae, Chenopodioideae) for South America" has various mentions of "Salar" and "Huasco", but the only mention I can see of "Salar de Huasco" is in:
19. Atriplex glaucescens Phil., Anales Mus. Nac. Santiago de Chile 2,8: 74 (1891)
[...]
[page break]
Specimens examined
CHILE. I Región-Tarapacá: Provincia de Iquique, Mamiña, M. Ricardi & C. Marticorena 4698, 22 September 1958 (CONC). Provincia del Tamarugal, Pica, quebrada Quisma, camino al Salar de Huasco, S. Teillier 4805, 5 July 2000 (CONC).
The individual article and year-long subscription prices for Naturen seem pretty tame, so you could consider that. Alternatively, I can attempt to request an interlibrary loan, but I'm not sure how successful it'll be or how long it'll take, since I'm not sure how many institutions have access to current issues that they're able to share (typically corresponds with being in print). Solomon Ucko (talk) 16:33, 6 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Greetings, has someone access to "Podnebne spremembe v času vrhunca in zatona rimske države ter selitve ljudstev., Casopis za Kritko Znanosti, Domisljijo in Novo Antropologijo (Journal for the Critique of Science, Imagination & New Anthropology), 2020, Vol 48, Issue 279, p179"?
For Mount Okmok
@Jo-Jo Eumerus: After struggling to get the article from various libraries, my university eventually unfortunately canceled it because "The copyright holder denied permission for an acquiring a copy of this item via Interlibrary Loan." I am very confused what's going on with this journal...
Perhaps in a few months it'll show up somewhere, such as:
ProQuest: The link seems to be broken, but I still see results for publication("Casopis za Kritiko Znanosti"). This article doesn't currently seem to be there, though it might show up later. The results appear to come from various databases, so some articles might be missing anyways. The latest I see is issue 276 (2021).
Their website: The latest I see is vol. 47, no. 276 (2021??).
dLib.si: The latest I see is vol. 47, no. 278 (2019).
FWIW, I found an article with the same author name, an identical or similar abstract, and an off-by-one page count compared to what's on EBSCOhost. It's available at both [22] and [23]. I see two mentions of Okmok. If you can't access it, let me know and I'll send you it. Is it enough?
Greetings, has someone access to "Michener, Carroll Kinsey. Heirs of the Incas. Minton, Balch, 1924."? I can't find any online version.
For Pichu Pichu
He whom we called the Loquacious One, always present on any voyage over land or ocean, awoke from a cat-nap and pointed out El Misti, a volcano not quite extinct, though there has been no eruption for centuries; Pichu Pichu, whose slopes are too steep for snow; and the white giants, Ampato and Coropuna.
— p. 12
I'm happy to provide additional context if you'd like; just let me know how much you want.
Greetings, has someone access to "Cunningham, Tim, and Jan Driessen, eds. Crisis to Collapse: The archaeology of social breakdown. Presses universitaires de Louvain, 2021." I need the chapters in OCLC1001565403 discussing Aniakchak and White River
For Mount Aniakchak and Mount Churchill
Greetings, has someone access to "Schenk E. (1964): Entwicklung und Zusammenbruch der Strukturen des Dauerfrostbodens.- Report of VI. Int. Congr. on Quaternary, Warsaw 1961, Vol. IV. Periglacial Section, Lodz 1964: 155-163" and " Westgate, J. A., 1987, Compositional comparison of Old Crow Tephra, Sheep Creek Tephra, and White River Ash and its significance for the provenance of other widespread Beringian tephras [abs.]: in International Union for Quaternary Research, 12, Programme and abstracts, Ottawa, ON, Canada, July 31-Aug. 9, 1987, p. 288. "?
For Mount Churchill
The above paper PDF became available @ above mentioned URL. First page mentions "First published 2024
by Routledge". Please help confirm this is a valid Routledge published paper along with official link from Routledge if possible.
Wow this is so strange... I cannot find any record of this book other than LinkedIn pages of an editor and a chapter author? So strange! It might be worth emailing Routledge's law editor to see if this is in fact a forthcoming book? Umimmak (talk) 16:01, 4 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I couldn't find anything either. It's probably a preprint of some sort, but either way I wouldn't recommend citing it unless and until it's available through the usual channels. Extraordinary Writ (talk) 04:06, 8 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Lambton, Ann (1956). : 129. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
Looking for Quis custodiet custodes "II" studia Islamica "VI" Ann K. S. Lambton Chapter containing page 129
This reference is taken from foot note number 28 page 240 of Von Grunebaum, G. E.. Modern Islam: The Search for Cultural Identity. United States, University of California Press, 2023.
As such my own purpose is resolved but I have referred this discussion at Humanities board for some inputs. I suppose it would be ok if I close this after two days? Thanks Bookku (talk) 15:06, 20 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Your link for "Best discs span globe" is actually a link to "SOUND CHECK: [VALLEY Edition]", which Wikipedia Library does have full-text access to. Did you mean [24]?
I don't seem to have access to any of these, but I can request interlibrary loans if you'd like. It looks like these are pretty widely held, so I should be receive scans about a couple of business days after requesting them, but I'm going to spread them out over a few days to avoid overwhelming my university's librarians, though batched by newspaper in case that makes it easier for them.
Chang, Richard / An engaging evening of ballads Review Juan Gabriel still has the juice to please his audience at the Pond.: [1 Edition] / 15 May 2001 / p. News&Revs
If you'd like me to start requesting these, please contact me via Special:EmailUser so I can send you the scans as I receive them.
Received. I've now put in requests for the 3 Houston Chronicle articles. Once I receive all of them, I'll send you them and request the San Antonio Express-News articles, and so on. Solomon Ucko (talk) 20:50, 12 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
For Władysław Umiński. I tried Wikipedia library but it still is not free. Not lin LibGen either. Weird: the price for individual is 14 euro, when I try to access through Wikimedia Library, it is 21 euros... huh?
This is a 140 page book; can you use the table of contents to narrow down your request at all? (Due to copyright restrictions, we cannot send you full book/thesis copies. Narrow down your request to a specific chapter or page(s).) Umimmak (talk) 16:52, 29 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I can try requesting an interlibrary loan through my university (or my public library) (both in the US), but I'm not sure how successful they'll be or how long they'll take. Should I try anyways?
@Sollyucko I received a scan of single page that may all be that I need from an editor on pl wiki, although I'd still be interested in otaining the pdf to double check things. I am not interested enoug to pay and I don't think WMF has a system to buy it for me, sadly (correct me if I am wrong). As for the loan thing, if you can get a pdf and share it, it would be great, but physical copy won't do us much good I fear :( Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here02:20, 22 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I can either request a PDF of specific page numbers, which might be extracted from a digital version or scanned from a print version (I can try to ask for a specific edition, but I'm not sure how successful it'll be), or a hard-copy of the whole book, which is slower and more difficult and you said wouldn't be useful. Both websites link to a PDF with a table of contents listing the chapters and page numbers. Note that I don't read Polish, but I can use context clues and Google Translate to find my way around. I'm not sure there's anything I can do in this case that the editor on pl wiki can't do, but let me know if there is.
I can see and download the whole thing on Google Books. Here's the relevant text (transcribed by Google Books OCR, besides manual fixes to whitespace etc.); feel free to let me know if you'd like more context:
En 1888 Don Samuel A. Lafone y Quevedo, uno de nuestros más eruditos historiadores, publicó Londres y Catamarca, interesante obra de investigación, en la que dió á conocer numerosos viejos papeles de esas regiones, reunidos á las muchas observaciones que había hecho en aquellos parajes, que aún hoy recorre contínuamente.
Conjunto al libro hay un mapa del paralelo 25 al 30, en que agrega á Catamarca, bajo el título de Jurisdicción de Londres, la parte sur del actual territorio, y aunque tomado del general, publicado por Brackebusch, tiene importancia en lo que á la Historia se refiere.
Dice de él el Señor Lafone :
« Los límites antiguos y modernos se han establecido con arreglo al auto de jurisdicción de don Jerónimo Luis de Cabrera, en 1633, cuando se refundó Londres en el sitio de Pomán, la Cédula Real de la jurisdicción de San Fernando, en el valle de Catamarca, y la Merced de Antofagasta, por la que consta de una manera evidente que la vasta región de Antofagasta, Carachapampa é Ingagasta ó Ingahuassi pertenece á la jurisdicción de Catamarca y desde luego con más razón á la República Argentina ».
Greetings, has someone access to "Munné, N. "El Departamento de Antofagasta de la Sierra." Geografıa de Catamarca (1978).? It's a chapter in a book
For Carachipampa
Greetings, has someone access to "Aschero, Carlos. "De cazadores y pastores. El arte rupestre de la modalidad Río Punilla en Antofagasta de la Sierra y la cuestión de la complejidad en la Puna meridional argentina." Tramas en la Piedra. Producción y usos del arte rupestre (2006): 103-140."? It's a chapter in a book
For Carachipampa
@Jo-Jo Eumerus:Google Books and HathiTrust both find no mention of Carachipampa in there, but Google Books does find the chapter title. What evidence do you have that it mentions Carachipampa? As long you can provide sufficient justification for it, if I can't get the content of interest by some other means, I'm happy to request a scan via interlibrary loan (which should take only a couple business days) of the page range you stated.
St. André, Arthur C. MD, FCCM; DelRossi, Anthony MD. Hemodynamic management of patients in the first 24 hours after cardiac surgery. Critical Care Medicine 33(9):p 2082-2093, September 2005. | doi:10.1097/01.CCM.0000178355.96817.81
It looks like my university has this newspaper on microfilm; if no-one else does this by the time I get a chance, I'll see if they have this date and if I can figure out how to use the microfilm readers. Solomon Ucko (talk) 06:35, 24 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Apollo468: They do have that month, and I managed to figure out how to use the reader. That date is no. 16363, and the article is on p. 20. It confirms that he died on September 4th in Tavers, Loiret. If you contact me via Special:EmailUser, I'll reply with the scan I got of the full article.
Greetings, has someone access to "Grilli, A.; Aguirre, E.; Durán, M.; Townsend, F.; González, A. 1999. Origen de las aguas subterráneas del sector Pica-Salar del Huasco, provincia de Iquique, I región de Tarapacá. XIII Congreso de Ingeniería Sanitaria y Ambiental AIDIS, Antofagasta, Chile.18 p."?
For Salar del Huasco.
Greetings, has someone access to "Alonso, Ricardo N. "El yacimiento boratífero de Laguna Salinas, Perú." XIII Congreso Geológico Argentino. 1996."?
For Pichu Pichu.
Greetings, has someone access to "Schmitz, M., Wigger, P., Araneda, J., Giese, R., Heinsohn, D., Röwer, P., & Viramonte, J. (1993). The Andean Crust at 24 S Latitude. In Actas XII Congreso Geológico Argentino3 (pp. 286-290)."?
For Salar del Huasco.
For Norah Olembo Archive.org saved record is not the full article, but the same as the link above "subscription required". I signed up for registration with The Standard but their archives only go back to 2017. Tried WP Library AllAfrica searches in ProQuest and Gale and cannot find this article. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
S. Peter Cowe, Ani: World Architectural Heritage of a Medieval Armenian Capital, Peeters, 2001, p. 7
"...population of 100,000 and 10,000 dwellings . Some scholars have questioned the population figure as being too high, although , according to the archaeologist Nicolai Marr who excavated at Ani, most of the people probably lived just outside the walls. Whether or not the population was that large, in Manandyan's opinion, it was unquestionably more than that of contemporary..."
Phlāinō̜i, Sombat (1985). Mural Paintings. Office of the National Culture Commission, Ministry of Education. Summary first.
For Sang Thong. The book is about "mural paintings" and makes reference to the tale of "Suwannasang", another account of the tale of the "Conch Shell Prince", a Southeast Asian tale of Buddhist provenance. I'm asking for the summary first, since there are two tales about a queen giving birth to the shell prince, and I need to better locate the version (which appears to be ca. pp. 38ff), and to see the context of where the tale is depicted in murals.
Should I try requesting an interlibrary loan scan from OCLC15488774, putting "[references to Suwannasang and conch]" as the chapter title, and "chapters w/ pp. 29, 38-42" for the pages? If needed, I could try requesting the physical book to look through myself, but that tends to take forever to ship.
Alright, I've put in a request, and I'll send you what I get. Feel free to subsequently let me know if you'd like me to request any additional pages. Solomon Ucko (talk) 21:13, 15 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I have access to it. Here's the paragraph about Erfat (there's also a paragraph about Shilo, and the rest is about the relevant law and how people are affected by it):
The anti-abortion movement in Israel is led by Efrat, a non-profit organization centered in Jerusalem. Public information campaigns encouraging continuation of an unplanned pregnancy as well as financial assistance to those women with an unplanned pregnancy are the main methods Efrat uses to influence women not to abort. Unlike the United States where violence has been used against abortion providers, the tactics utilized by Efrat are directed at the women seeking an abortion: instilling fear regarding the risks of abortion and its potential to make women infertile, and guilt regarding "killing" the unborn child. There have been several headline-making incidents of Efrat volunteers harassing women applying for abortions in hospitals by pulling out pictures of fetuses in order to intimidate them.
I think 6 is the start page and the page count is unspecified? The publisher is the National Council of Jewish Women, and the ISSN is 0161-2115. It's in ProQuest's GenderWatch database, and the accession number is SFLNSNCJW0599INGW521000045.
I've received this, but the only mention of "humid" is in:
[88] Lebamba J, Vincens A, Lézine AM, Marchant R, Buchet G. Forest-savannah dynamics on the Adamawa plateau (Central Cameroon) during the “African humid period” termination: A new high-resolution pollen record from Lake Tizong. Rev Palaeobot Palynol 2016; 235: 129-39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2016.10.001
— p. 1214
this is cited only in:
Raphiostylis is one of the dominant liana species, with 669 lianas [87], and is distributed in the Adamawa plateau of Central Cameroon [88].
Greetings, has someone access to "Hockett, Bryan, and Eric Dillingham. Large-Scale Traps of the Great Basin. Texas A&M University Press, 2023."?
For Neopluvial
Here's the text that seems to me (as a layperson) to be relevant, extracted by searching Google Books:
Between 3,500 and 4,000 years ago, Elko Series points replaced [(page break?)] Gatecliff and Humboldt points as the dominant projectile point style in many areas of the Great Basin. The eastern Sierra Nevada region also saw the production of a variety of Martis projectile point styles, including corner notched, side notched, and contracting stem, the latter of which has characteristic nods to the Gypsum point style more common in the southern reaches of the Great Basin (e.g., Elston 1971). This marks the Late Middle Archaic period. This period is associated with at least two different climatic phases. Between 2,800 and 3,800 years ago, the climate was cool and wet. Dubbed the Neoglacial or Neopluvial, these relatively cool and wet conditions fostered increases in marsh habitat, particularly in the western Great Basin (Rhode 2016). The largest aboriginal residential houses in Nevada were constructed at this time (e.g. McGuire et al. 2017). Sometime after 2,800 years ago, and particularly between about 2,000 and 2,750 years ago, the climate turned xeric. This climatic phase, known as the Late Holocene dry period or Late Holocene drought (Mensing et al. 2013), [...]
— pp. 36-37?
Let me know if you'd like me to attempt to extract anything else.
More recently, declassified U2 aerial photographs (1950s and 60s) have been applied to the Middle East, where they revealed features in Jordan, including desert kites that have since been destroyed (Hammer and Ur, 2019).
— p. 116 (based on index)
Hammer, E., & Ur, J. (2019). Near eastern landscapes and declassified U2 aerial imagery. Advances in Archaeological Practice, 7 (2), 107–126.
Greetings, has someone access to "Lavkulich, L. M., and J. I. Sneddon. "Pedogenesis of Canadian Cordilleran alpine soils." Quaternary Soils. Geo Abstracts Norwich, 1978. 471-485."?
For Mount Churchill
According to Google Books, the only mention of "Huaynaputina" in the book is in what appears to be a citation:
35. María Eugenia Petit - Breuilh Sepúlveda , ' Miedo y respuesta social en Arequipa : la erupción de 1600 del volcán Huaynaputina ( Perú ) ' , Obradoiro de Historia Moderna , 25 ( 2016 ) , 67–94 .
— p. ??? in endnotes for ch. 7 "Disasters and devotion"
Greetings, has someone access to "Iverson, N.A., Dunbar, N.W., McIntosh, W.C., 2014. How advancements in analytical techniques are improving our understanding of the englacial tephra record in Antarctica, Tephra 2014- Maximizing the potential of tephra for multidisciplinary studies, Portland, OR."?
For Mount Aniakchak
Greetings, has someone access to "VanderHoek, Richard, and Rachel Myron. Cultural remains from a catastrophic landscape: an archaeological overview and assessment of Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve. United States Department of Interior, National Park Service, Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve, 2004."?
For Mount Aniakchak
WorldCat says University of Maine Libraries have a copy of OCLC971020134. Does anyone here have access to that, or should I attempt to request a scan of the whole thing via interlibrary loan? It's 258 pages, so I'm not sure if that's a good idea...
https://scholarworks.alaska.edu/bitstream/handle/11122/4909/Rains_uaf_0006N_10293.pdf?sequence=1 cites p. 39 for which locations were populated, p. 197 for "evidence for the Camp and Ugashik River phases being included in the Thule tradition" and "similarities between the Koniag tradition in Kodiak and the Alaska Peninsula", Figure 7-4 for "the geographic boundary zones of the flows" and other related statements, pp. 197-198 for "Two Alaska Peninsula sites, SUT-00024 and SUT-00027 are not defined by researchers as either Norton or Koniag but as a combination of Port Moller/Aleutian and Kachemak influences", pp. 3-10 for the investigation of the site, pp. 80-85 for the finding of non-local obsidian, and pp. 89-95 for comparison to "SUT-00024".
https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/1810/downloads/pp1810.pdf cites "their figures 7, 8; Cabin Bluff section, ANI 99–K" for "a 45-cm-thick bed of relatively coarse silicic pumice ~40 km southeast of the caldera near Aniakchak Bay", "sample ANI 99–L" for "a comparatively thin tephra bed", "their table 8.1, appendix C, and p. 161–162" for the date Surprise Lake drained based on "wood from above pebbly sediment near the Aniakchak River mouth", and pp. 190-191 for "The suggested date for the flood falls within an ~200 yr gap in human habitation near the mouth of the Aniakchak River"
For this type of source, I need the full report; a few pages won't cut it unless you want to cross-reference with the current Mount Aniakchak article to tell which pages don't contain additional information. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk) 09:54, 13 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The NPS IRMA database online search seems to be broken right now, but I'll try again in a few days, and if it is either still not working or has nothing useful, I guess I'll try asking for a scan via ILL and see what happens.
This seems like a US federal government document, so if I'm able to confirm that it's entirely in the public domain, I might look into uploading the scan to Wikimedia Commons or Wikisource or Internet Archive or somewhere similar.
According to HathiTrust, The new Grove dictionary of jazz by Barry Kernfeld, 2nd edition (2002) mentions "The blitz and all that jazz" (as well as "Weekend Australian Review") on v. 1, p. 150. My university has this in print, so when I get a chance, I'll take a look at it to see how much information it has.
As for the original article, sources such as https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5800460a6a49633891fd8dad/t/61f7b4fc53d0363d36755eff/1643623702508/Makin+333+FINAL+%281%29.pdf hint that Weekend Australian or Australian Weekend Review might be the same thing, but it's hard to tell for sure... It sounds like it might be a magazine bundled with the Saturday newspaper?? I'd recommend asking if someone at WP:WikiProject Australia can help or provide any advice. If you remind me in a week or two, when my university library's ILL department is least busy, I can try requesting an interlibrary loan with no ISSN or OCLC number specified, and see what my university's librarians can figure out; I don't know how successful they'll be, but I can give it a try then.
Greetings, has someone access to "Tchilinguirian, Pablo y Martín Barandica 1998. Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna
Catamarqueña (Anexo I). Revista Hombre y Desierto, 9 Tomo I: 351-352"?
For Carachipampa
TCHILINGUIRIAN, P. AND M. BARANDICA 1995 Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna Catamarqueña (Anexo I). En: Hombre y Desierto, Tomo I Simposios 9, p. 351-352. (cited in [26] AKA [27])
Tchiliguirian, P., Barandica, M., 1995. Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna catamarqueña. Hombre y Desierto. Una perspectiva cultural 9, 351–352. (cited in [28] AKA [29])
TCHILINGUIRIAN, P. Y M. BARANDICA, 1995. Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna Catamarqueña. Hombre y Desierto 9: 351-352. (cited in [30] AKA [31] AKA [32])
Tchilingirián, P. y M. Barandica 1995 Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna Catamarqueña. Actas del XI Congreso de Arqueología Chilena. Hombre y Desierto, tomo 1, Simposios n° 9: 351-352. Antofagasta. (cited in [33])
Tchilinguirian, P., & Barandica, M. (1995). Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna Catamarqueña Argentina. Hombre y Desierto (Vol. 9, pp. 351–352). Universidad de Antofagasta y Sociedad Chilena de Arqueología. (cited in [34])
TCHILINGUIRIAN, P. y M. BARANDICA, 1995. Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna catamarqueña. Hombre y Desierto 9: 351-352. (cited in [35])
I've put in an ILL request for Hombre y Desierto / Actas del XIII Congreso Nacional de Arqueología Chilena : Antofagasta, 10 al 14 de octubre de 1994; "Acontecimientos naturales que favorecieron el asentamiento humano en ambientes de la Puna Catamarqueña"; Tchiliguirian, P., Barandica, M.; vol. 9; no. 1; 1995; pp. 351-352; ISSN0716-5897; OCLC38464825. Hopefully that'll work. If I receive a scan, I'll send you it; if it gets cancelled, I'll reply here. Feel free to ask whenever if you'd like to know the status of the request.
Consulta a los pueblos indigenas. Author: Rodrigo Egaña Baraona Date: July 2009 From: Mensaje (Vol. 58, Issue 580) Publisher: Residencia San Roberto Bellarmino
Sr. Director:
[...]
El Gobierno está readecuando la normativa gubernamental referida a estos y estudia los cambios legales que demandará su aplicación en los próximos años. Uno de los más importantes es el deber que tiene el Estado de realizar procesos de consulta indígena sobre temas que afecten directamente a los integrantes de estos pueblos (artículo 60 del Convenio 169). [...]
Sobre la base de esto, en los últimos meses se han realizado tres procesos de consulta. [...] La tercera consulta está circunscrita al Salar del Huasco y a las comunidades que viven en esa zona.
[...]
Rodrigo Egaña Baraona Comisionado Presidencial para Asuntos Indígenas
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2009 Residencia San Roberto Bellarmino
Source Citation (MLA 9th Edition): Egaña Baraona, Rodrigo. "Consulta a los pueblos indigenas." Mensaje, vol. 58, no. 580, July 2009, pp. 2+. [...]
Greetings, has someone access to "Guevara C (1968) Mapa geológica del cuadrángulo de Characato. Servicio De Geología y Minería Del Perú 1(100):000
Return to ref 1968 in article"?
For Pichu Pichu.
As far as I can tell, here's the relevant text on that page: "Constituida fundamentalmente por la impresionante cordillera andina, la sierra [...] Cabe destacar también una amplia zona de intensa actividad tectónica, cuyos testigos pueden ser los volcanes Pichu Pichu o Chachán."
Richard, Jean (1989). "Aux origines d'un grand lignage: Des Palladii à Renaud de Châtillon". Media in Francia. Recueil de mélanges offert à Karl Ferdinand Werner à l'occasion de son 65e anniversaire par ses amis et collègues français. Maulévrier. pp. 409–418. ISBN9782903851576.
I'm hoping to revise our article about Rafida; it desperately needs that. The term Rafida is a derogatory title for Shia Muslims. A potential source is Shia Revival by Vali Nasr, a leading expert. What does the book say about this word? As a resident of Iran, I haven't been able to access the book from free and legal channels. As an alternative, could someone please take snapshots of the pages where the word appears? There should only a few occurrences in the book, perhaps even only one. These can be found by looking at the index at the end of the book.
There is one mention. Here is the paragraph: "By the eleventh century these attitudes had also been canonized by Hanbali jurists, who condemned Shias as rafidis, or rejecters of the Truth. They said that Shias should not lead prayers or marry Sunnis, and that any meat that Shias slaughtered was not halal (permissible) for Sunni consumption. In short, the Shia were not to be treated as Muslims. After the Mongol sack of Baghdad and the destruction of the Abbasid caliphate in 1258, attacks on Shiism grew even sharper. Hanbali characterization has in recent history found a reflection in the extremist Sunnis’ demonization of Shiism, which regards the faith as a heresy and a bigger threat to “true” Islam than Christianity and Judaism." My copy is an e-book without fixed page numbers (it depends on the screen size), but I can say it is in Chapter 1. Zerotalk11:45, 27 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Worthing, A. G. (April 1, 1943). "George Walter Stewart, Recipient of the 1942 Oersted Medal for Notable Contributions to the Teaching of Physics". American Journal of Physics. 11: 89–91. doi:10.1119/1.1990448.
In my sandbox I have a draft article on the physicist George W. Stewart (1876–1956) that I'm working to expand. This old paper covers his Oersted Medal award and hopefully adds more biographical details. Unfortunately it is pay-walled so I can't access it. I didn't find a free-access version available.
For Pantheon ad Lucem. Weirdly, EbscoHost claims to have full text of Elle from 1994 to present, but whenever I search using WMF , there's a gap of several years in the early 2000s, including 2004. Wondering if it's an issue with my access specifically, or what. Thanks, ♠PMC♠ (talk)22:28, 9 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Premeditated Chaos: I'm struggling to find it online anywhere, so I've requested an interlibrary loan for it.
Greetings, has someone access to "Frutos, José. "La Cordillera de los Andes: Palabras de Presentación." Geología y Recursos Minerales de Chile.(Frutos et al.; editores). Editorial de la Universidad de Concepción (1985): 3-9."?
For Salar del Huasco.
Senagupta, Pallaba; Basu, Arpita; Basu, Śarmishṭhā (2006). Folklore of the Kolhan. Asiatic Society. pp. 66ff.
For The Love for Three Oranges (fairy tale). I'm separating the Indian/South Asian tales from the article to declog it. pp. 66ff contain the commentaries by the Indian authors about the tale.
"31/127 – Arméförvaltningen, Tygavdelningen, Vapenbyrån, Serie F I, Avgångna och inkomna skrivelser ordnade efter klassifikationssystem, Volym nr 78 (Dnr 600022 – 680023: 1953): projekt 125000" [31/127 – The Swedish Army Materiel Administration, The Material Section, The Weapon Bureau, Series F I, Outgoing and incoming letters arranged according to classification system, Volume no. 78 (Dnr 600022 – 680023: 1953): project 125000] (Document) (in Swedish). Sweden: Armématerielförvaltningens arkiv via Krigsarkivet (the Royal Swedish Army Materiel Administration archive, via the Swedish Military Archive). 1953. SE/KrA/0062/D/01/008:H/F I/78.sok.riksarkivet.se/nad?postid=Arkis+4596cd59-f4f9-4833-a155-79ec6925b1a5
For Carl Gustaf 8.4 cm recoilless rifle - this reference already appears in the article, however I wish to verify that it supports the claim therein, as it has been added by a user who has had previous issues with V/OR
@Launchballer: I seem to have access to the whole thing. If you contact me via Special:EmailUser, I'll reply with a PDF of the article and a list of URLs of the embedded videos.
I don't have access to the book myself, but it's in the Big Ten Academic Alliance, so if I request an inter-library loan for specific pages, I should get a scan in a couple of business days. According to HathiTrust, Chowking appears on pp. 87, 226, 231-233, and Kuan appears on the front cover, pp. 3, 6, 226, and the back cover. I'm also adding a page on each side for context, and merging nearby page ranges.
Should I request a scan of pp. 1-7, 86-88, 225-234 and the covers?
I read on the Books In Print website that ProQuest gives access to this database. We have access to ProQuest, of course, but I can't seem to find how to access the BIP database. Your help is appreciated! Thanks, Drmies (talk) 18:26, 8 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What is your specific request for this database? There are different levels of access to ProQuest, so just because something is on ProQuest doesn’t mean it comes with every ProQuest subscription. Umimmak (talk) 21:34, 8 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Greetings, has someone access to "Elissondo, M., C. Farías, and E. Collini. "Evaluación del riesgo volcánico relativo en Argentina." XX Congreso Geológico Argentino. Vol. 20. 2017."?
For Arizaro volcanic field.
Additionally searching HathiTrust indicates that "Ling Nam" is mentioned on pp. 1-13 of v. 16, as well as the front and back matter. Let me know if you'd like me to request a scan via inter-library loan accordingly.
@Vortex3427: I think I found the Fieldstaff Report in print, and sent you an email on February 20th with pictures of what I found; I'm sorry if they got shuffled by my email client. I also sent you the scan I got of Taking AIM. Solomon Ucko (talk) 16:20, 28 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Need access to Journal West Africa, possibly EBSCO has it?
For Obioma Nwaorgu Tough to search because obviously the journal name is the same as a region of Africa and I don't know either the article name or author of the article. Looking for information on Nwaorgu's disinfection program. Tried both Hathitrust and archive.org but couldn't find the journal, just books and articles about the region. Any help would be greatly appreciated. A google search for the journal (with the ISSN) shows that EBSCO Information Services hosts the book. When I pressed on the link it goes to a page for Skidmore College and requires a sign in. I searched the WP EBSCO site but again it returns information on the region, not the journal. Searching her name produces lots of results, but no this result. *sigh* Can anyone help?
My university has the full text of this on microform in our off-site library; 1990 is split between Jan-Jun and Jul-Dec.
It also subscribes to various EBSCOhost databases, which collectively have various scattered citations to this journal. (ISSN 0043-2962 OR JN "West Africa"), but it only shows 3 results for 1990, none of which include this page number. However, they hint that page numbering continues within each year.
@Doc Taxon: If you can't access this, let me know and I'll give it a try.
Searching HathiTrust for the ISSN shows that it has it, but search-only; searching 1990 Jan-Apr and no.3776-3792 1990 for "O.C. Nwaorgu" finds it on p. 343 of each.
I'm having trouble logging into the system to request the microform, so I've instead attempted to put in a request for the article, and added an explanatory note. I'll do my best to get it by some means. I already have your email address, so I'll send you what I get when I get it, hopefully in a couple of days.
@SusunW: It looks like they were looking for it in the off-site library at about this time last Friday, and there haven't been any status updates since then. Should I try to ask them what's going on? Note that they could take anywhere from an hour to a few days to respond.
I don't want to make extra work for you, Sollyucko, but it's a wee bit frustrating, as I cannot publish the article without this critical source. Let's wait a few more days. If you don't have it by say Wednesday could you ask them? SusunW (talk) 18:45, 5 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Got it, makes sense. I've set myself a reminder for tomorrow afternoon to check on it; if I don't see any online status update at that time, I'll send them an email to ask.
Or alternatively, it looks like I am now able to log into the system to request the microform directly, so should I just do that and cancel my other request? If I use the microform myself (which I'm now familiar with after fulfilling another request here), I'll make sure to include any relevant content and metadata, rather than just blindly scanning a single page, which they might do.
Alright, makes sense. I'm happy to put in some effort to help a good cause, especially when I enjoy doing the work, such as with this.
I don't see any new status updates, so I've canceled my ILL request and put in a hold request instead, since I'd rather just do it myself than try to keep bugging them to get the right thing. I should hopefully receive this in a couple of days, and I'll try to get you a scan either the same day or the next day.
Collier's Encyclopedia. 1980? New York: P.F. Collier.
For Definitions of science fiction. The article includes a quote from Barry Malzberg which has been traced to a 1981 journal. In that article Malzberg says the quote comes from "from the COLLIER'S ENCYCLOPEDIA where after a five-year hold it finally was slipped in for the late Groff Conklin's essay early in 1980". I think this probably means it was published in the 1980 edition of the Encyclopedia, and I'd like to verify that so that the date of the quote can be set correctly. The quote is "Science fiction is that form of literature which deals with the effects of technological change in an imagined future, an alternative present or a reconceived past", in case that helps in finding it. I would guess it's in the encyclopedia entry for "science fiction", but Malzberg doesn't say.
@Mike Christie: Sorry, I didn't find it neither in the 1980 edition of the year 1979 nor in the 1981 edition of the year 1980, – anyway there's also no separate entry for "Science fiction". – Doc Taxon • Talk • 17:30, 4 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know the page range. Also I am assuming both links are about the same source, I'd bet on that. For Tom J. Winnifrith. Might ask for more sources in the future to be able to write an article about him as he's fairly obscure. But this source will be indispensable. SuperΨDro22:37, 3 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Monroe, Justin (August 2004). "Revolutions: Terror Squad – True Story". Vibe. p. 140. ISSN1070-4701.
For True Story (Terror Squad album). The Vibe magazine was previously available through Google Books, but a few years ago it was removed. Now there are only a few issues and little bits available online. While it was available, editors put the Vibe review score 4 out of 5 into the article. However, online stores (which usually have the correct reviews/scores) say the score was 3.5 out of 5. The magazine should be available through ProQuest's Entertainment Industry Magazine Archive, but that collection unfortunately isn't available through TWL. The full review would be amazing, but just the score would suffice. Thanks in advance! AstonishingTunesAdmirer連絡12:16, 4 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Funnily enough, it helped me find it. In the sidebar of the site you linked, there's a link to Google Books, that was generous enough to show me short previews, which I used to recreate the entire page of the review. Thank you so much! {{Resolved}}AstonishingTunesAdmirer連絡15:42, 4 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hakob Manandyan, A Brief Survey of the History of Ancient Armenia, Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, 1975, p. 39
"... Ani counted 100,000 inhabitants and 10,000 dwellings . The round figures cited above are , of course , extremely questionable , but they permit us to suppose that the population of the larger cities of Bagratid Armenia was..."
{{resolved}}
"An exploration of the evidence surrounding the identity of the last captive Thylacine"
Authors: Gareth Linnard; Stephen R. Sleightholme Australian Zoologist (2023) 43 (2): 287–338. https://doi.org/10.7882/AZ.2023.034
@Jimmyjrg: Thank you. Your email hasn't reached my inbox (yet) but I was able to access the download link you provided via my Wikipedia toolbar alerts. Muzilon (talk) 03:41, 6 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]