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.
For Margaret Carroux (draft), I am looking for her obituary that apparently only appeared in the paper version of the Frankfurter Rundschau, which has no online archive. Specifically, I would like be able to confirm her maiden name and dates of birth and death that are given in de:Margaret Carroux. Date and page number taken from here.
Tee, M.S. (1995). The Singapore Successful Business Elites. Singapore: Cross Century Creative City. pp. 132–137. ISBN9789810069124. {{cite book}}: no-break space character in |first= at position 1 (help)
For Minecraft – Volume Alpha. Likely going to be a necessary source if I try to take the article beyond GA as it appears to be the only academic source that (seemingly) mentions the album and talks about several individual songs. As many pages as possible would be preferred.
For a possible draft I will create. Is Bloomberg available as part of the Wikipedia library? I often wish I could use it more regularly as a reference.
For Draft:Devin gambit, I have been looking for sources to expand on the 3. ...d5 lines. According to Chessable search, this course has some material about a particular line in this gambit (1.d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. g4 d5), and I suspect that the relevant text content is in the "16) 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 - 3rd Move Alternatives" chapter. This was played by Espineko in response to Mamedyarov's use of the gambit in the 2022 Tata Steel Masters at Wijk aan Zee. If I could get just the text explanation of each of the variations involving the move order 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3. g4 d5, as if one were in the "book" mode, that would be sufficient.
For Draft:Kimboo, about a long-overlooked Franco-Ivorian animated series from the turn of the 1990s. This section, I clearly remember from perusing through this source back in my Waterbury days, mentions that it was the first animated material to air on BET. Need source to verify and refresh my memory; Open Library/Archive.org does have Television Cartoon Shows listed, but only the original 1995 edition (in which our show du jour is not listed). McFarland is a WP:Library partner, so a signup for its archives to find out might be arranged in due course. (Potential DYK in the works, planned for completion this weekend.)
Speaking of Waterbury, see also my CLA News & Views filing from days earlier (re: Draft:Silas Bronson Library).
Trifon, Nicolas (2007). "Trois poètes aroumains d'Albanie : Ilia Colonja, Spiru Fuchi et Dumitru Fuchi". Au sud de l’Est : les cultures des Balkans (in French). No. 3. Paris: Non-Lieu. pp. 102–112. ISBN978-2-35270-036-4. OCLC1408684699.
Possibly OCLC470930246 also refers to this magazine. In 2007 the 2nd and 3rd issues of Au sud de l’Est : les cultures des Balkans were published. Like with the identifier that I put above in the template for the 3rd one there's also another identifier very clearly referred to the second one [1], so this unnumbered one could refer to any of the two. This is the magazine's section in the publisher's website [2]. Thanks, SuperΨDro15:08, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
To answer to your question in the email, yes, I changed my email address, though I checked the old one and I hadn't received anything. Thanks a lot for your help. SuperΨDro10:21, 14 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Marsh, Thelma R. (1984). Daughter of Grey Eyes: The Story of Mother Solomon. OCLC11815829.
For User:Averageuntitleduser/Mother Solomon. Although self-published, it has been touted extensively by Labelle 2021 and newspapers of the time. I am looking for as many pages as is possible or reasonable. I'd be happy with any range, but am most interested in her activities in Kansas and work as a nanny upon returning to Ohio, the general 40s area seems a safe bet. I have found no online copy, and HaithiTrust is a dead end, but it is held by a handful of universities, like Indiana and Cornell, as well as some local Ohian libraries.
This entry suggests that Adventures in a TV Nation was reviewed on page 73 of the 3 July 1998 edition of Entertainment Weekly. Who wrote the review? How long is that review? Is it significant coverage?
Found it in EBSCO. The November 27, 1998 review by Bruce Fretts is only 1 sentence long: "In-your-face documentarian and working-class advocate chronicles the development of his late, Emmy-award-winning newsmagazine show". MrLinkinPark333 (talk) 17:47, 14 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Foes ([3]) is an obscure science fiction film that was shot in the Santa Barbara, California, area (and on Anacapa Island) around 1977. There's very little information about it. I think it's possible that newspapers in the Santa Barbara area wrote about the filming. The newspapers are digitized, but access is restricted: [4]. On the off-chance that there's someone who's local to Santa Barbara and able to visit the public library, good keywords would be "John Coats" (director), "Foes" (title), "UFO" (major plot element). I realize that this is an unusual and difficult ask.
Regular Newspapers.com (WP:Library-wise) only shows a smattering of local TV listings from the early 1980s--all of them from Philadelphia. Googling 'Foes - "John Coats"' gives us a couple more pointers which may or may not be reliable. Unsure whether it passes WP:NFILM yet. (As an aside, I'm in Florida.)
@Slgrandson Yes, I own the Blu-ray :). Based on broadly-available online sources I doubt it would pass WP:NFILM, but I'm hoping that offline or more limited sources (such as the Santa Barbara papers) might help establish something. Mackensen(talk)11:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Mackensen: Digitized newspapers available through the Santa Barbara Public Library are unlikely to help you. Only two in their list are available for the late seventies: Carpinteria Herald and Goleta Sun. They can be searched via newspapers.com even without an account.[5][6] They return zero results for "John Coats" Foes. If you would like the reviews from The Hollywood Reporter and Screen International, email me. --Worldbruce (talk) 06:56, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Shriver, G. H. (November 2000). "How the millennium comes violently: From Jonestown to Heaven's Gate". Choice. 38 (3): 553. ISSN0009-4978. ProQuest225855402.
Hadden, Sally E. (2001). "Chapter 4. In Times of Tranquility: Everyday Slave Patrols". Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas. Harvard Historical Studies No. 138. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 105–136. doi:10.2307/j.ctv1g809mv. ISBN9780674258013. JSTORj.ctv1g809mv. OCLC603622768.
For slave pass - per Google Books there are three or four pages around p. 111 that discuss. TY!!
I do not know if this is the right venue to ask, but I would like an English transcript of two video interviews with Uwe Holmer. I want to double-check the facts on his early life and might end up citing them if such sources are allowed for a GA.
{{stale}}Hi all.I'm looking for some sources on Paleogene artiodactyls:
Abusch-Siewert S. 1989. Bemerkungen zu den Anoplotherien (Artiodactyla, Mammalia) der Pariser Gipse. Munchner Geowissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen (A) 15: 55–78.
Brunet, M., and J. Sudre. 1980. Deux nouveaux dichobunidés (Artiodactyla, Mammalia) de l'Oligocène inférieur d’Europe. I, II. Proceedings of the Koninklike Nederlandse Akademie Van Wetenschapen, Serie B 83: 121-143.
Brunet, M. 1974. Le premier crane attribue au genre Entelodon (Artiodactyla) appartient en realite au genre Palaeotherium (Perissodactyla). Ann. Paleontol. (Vert.), Paris, 60, 2: 235-242.
Brunet, M. 1979. Les grands Mammiferes chefs de file de l'immigration Oligocene et le probleme de la limite Eocene-Oligocene en Europe. Editions de la Fondation Singer-Polignac, Paris, France. 281 pp.
Dechaseaux, C. 1967. Artiodactyls des Phosphorites du Quercy. I. Etude sur le genre Dichodon. Annales de Paléontologie (Vertèbres), Vert. 51 189-208, 8 fig.
Dietrich, W. O. 1936. Die Huftiere aus dem Obereozän von Mähringen auf der Ulmer. Alb. Palaeontogr., Abt. A 83 163-209, 55 figs., 4 pls.
Dineur. 1982. Le genre Brachyodus, Anthracotheriidae (Artiodactyla, Mammalia) du Miocene inferieur d'Europe et d'Afrique. Memoires des Sciences de la Terre, Universite de Paris, vol. 6, p. 1–186.
Ducrocq, 1995. The contribution of Paleogene anthracotheriid artiodactyls in the paleobiogeographical history of Southern Europe. Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Monatshefte, no. 6, p. 355–362.
Hellmund. 1991. Revision der europaischen Species der Gattung Elomeryx Marsh 1894 (Anthracotheriidae, Artiodactyla, Mammalia)— Odontologische Untersuchungen. Palaeontographica Abteilung A, vol. 220, p. 1–101, pls. 1–12.
Hurzeler J. 1936. Osteologie und Odontologie der Caenotheriden. Abhandlungen der Schweizerschen Palaeontologischen Gesellschaft 58–59: 1–111.
Hooker J.J, Weidmann M. 2000. The Eocene mammal faunas of Mortmont, Switzerland. Schweizerische Palaontologische Abhandlungen 120: 1–141.
Sudre. J. 1988. Apport à la connaissance du Dichobune robertiana Gervais, 1848–1852 (Mammalia, Artiodactyla) du Lutétien: considérations sur l'évolution des Dichobunidés. Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg 107:409-418.
Abusch-Siewert S. 1989. Bemerkungen zu den Anoplotherien (Artiodactyla, Mammalia) der Pariser Gipse. Munchner Geowissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen (A) 15: 55–78. 🇺🇲JayCubby✡ plz edit my user pg! Talk18:48, 26 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I got #8 (Ducrocq, 1995. The contribution of Paleogene anthracotheriid artiodactyls in the paleobiogeographical history of Southern Europe. Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Monatshefte, no. 6, p. 355–362.).
P.S. I also got #2, and my university's off-site library has vols. 51 and 60 (1974) of OCLC1777405, so I've requested scans of #3 and #5; note that for #5 the year appears to be 1965, unless you'd like part II (see [7]).
As for #4, #7, #9, #10, and #11, please see the top of the page: "Due to copyright restrictions, we cannot send you full book/thesis copies. Narrow down your request to a specific chapter or page(s)."
As for #1, #6, and #12, my university doesn't have these, but I can request interlibrary loans for them if you'd like.
@Arctodus-simus: Alright, I've requested #1, #6, and #12. For the books (and one massive multi-volume article), please use a source such as Google Books or HathiTrust to identify specific page numbers you're interested in. Alternatively, if you let me know what to look for, I can request the whole book in print and try to find the relevant parts (I'm not sending the whole thing), but please note that English is my native language, I studied French for 3 years a few years ago, and I have no specific education in German, since this impacts my ability to find relevant parts of the book.
I've received a scan of #6. The two main parts are titled "Artiodactyla. Fam. Anoplotheriidae Gray, 1821¹)" (with a corresponding footnote that I can transcribe if you're interested) and "Perissodactyla. Fam. Palaeotheriidae Bonaparte, 1850." Are you also interested in working on articles about perissodactyls or only about artiodactyls specifically?
Agriculture and Live-stock in India. Volume VIII. Part 1. January 1938. Imperial Council of Agricultural Research. Colonel Sir Arthur Olver, C.B., C.M.G.,F.R.C.V.S. An appreciation. pp. 339-340.
Gilbert, Richard B. (2008). "Controversial New Religions". Illness, Crisis & Loss. 16 (3): 262–263. ISSN1054-1373.
For an article on the book which I haven't made yet. This exists in EBSCO, but despite the fact that WPL has access to sagepub it seemingly doesn't exist there? Or anywhere else. Honestly even if someone can't get this to me I'd appreciate evidence this review actually exists and isn't some strange EBSCO hallucination.
Edit: also, ProQuest214872689, from Studies in Religion Vol. 36, Iss. 1, seems to be about this book. Anyone have access to that? Thanks!
These are a series of scientific articles I am unable to access online. I have checked the Wikipedia Library as well as Google Scholar. Most of these are unlikely to be in English. Two of them (the ones by Bakr) I suspect are rare outside of Pakistan.
YPons-Moyà, Joan (1987). "Fortunictis nov. gen. acerensis nov. sp. nuevo Metailurini (Mammalia, Carnivora) del Mioceno superior de la Península Ibérica" [Fortunictis nov. gen. acerensis nov. sp. new Metailurini (Mammalia, Carnivora) from the Upper Miocene of the Iberian Peninsula.]. Paleontologia i evolució (in Spanish) (21): 63–68. S2CID133680588.
YCrusafont-Pairo, M.; Aguirre, E. (1972). "Stenailurus, Félidé nouveau du Turolien d'Éspagne" [Stenailurus, A New Felid of the Turolian of Spain]. Annales de Paléontologie (in French). 58 (2): 211–223.
YSchmidt-Kittler, Norbert (1976). "Raubtiere aus dem Jungtertiär Kleinasiens" [Carnivores from the Late Tertiary of Asia Minor]. Palaeontographica Abteilung A (in German). 155: 1–131.
YBakr, A. (1969). "A new genus of large cat from Upper Siwaliks". Pakistan Journal of Zoology. 1 (2): 135–140.
Bakr, A. (1986). "On a collection of Siwalik Carnivora". Biological Society of Pakistan. Monograph 11: 1–64.
Yvon Koenigswald, G. H. R. (1934). "Zur Stratigraphie des javanischen Pleistocan" [On the stratigraphy of the Javanese Pleistocene]. De Ingenieur in Nederlandsch Indie (in German). 1 (4): 190. hdl:1887.1/item:2451806.
Yvon Koenigswald, G.H.R. (1974). "Fossil mammals of Java part 6 Machairodontinae from the lower Pleistocene of Java". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen Series B Physical Sciences. 77 (4): 267–273. INISTPASCALGEODEBRGM7520066100.
@SilverTiger12, Are you sure about the publication information you cite for number 6? I'm looking at what I think is volume one issue 4 and just can't find that article. Also the link you provide is to a november issue, issue 4 is from April. Eddie891TalkWork19:53, 5 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunately, no, I'm not certain about the publication information; I tracked it down as a potential source second or third-hand a while ago. Doing a search again, I can't track down where the issue 4 part came from, just that it is in volume 1. My apologies. SilverTiger12 (talk) 21:15, 5 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Not to be rude, Eddie, but the article refers to a "Plate I", with 4 figures, that isn't in the PDF. Do you also have that or no? Happy editing, SilverTiger12 (talk) 23:10, 6 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SilverTiger12: Please clarify what portions of this request are complete and what portions are still outstanding. The tradition method is to strike the list items that you no longer need. Next week I'll be at a library that has 3, 4, and 6, but am reluctant to spend my limited time there scanning hundreds of pages if you may not still need them. --Worldbruce (talk) 19:34, 28 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Worldbruce: I have done so. Only 3, 5, and 6 are still needed. Unfortunately I don't think I can narrow down the needed page ranges in 3 and 6. Although for 3 the most needed part is the section on felids (cats), Miomachairodus in specific, if you only have limited time. And for 6, close to the same: section on felids, Epimachairodus zwierzykii in specific. Happy editing, SilverTiger12 (talk) 19:43, 28 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
You can preview different little bits of it by searching through the book for "Panthera" and "pathanensis".
Let me know you think if it would be useful for me to request an interlibrary loan (which can be physical or digital) for chapter 105 of "Proceedings of Fourth Pakistan Congress of Zoology" through my university. The second WorldCat link says that University of Minnesota, Twin Cities has a copy, and both it and my university are in the Big Ten Academic Alliance, so it should be more likely to be accepted and should be processed faster, compared to it being at some unaffiliated institution.
A lead! Thank you! I've had a hard enough time finding this source to say yes, please request the interlibrary loan. I think that might actually be what I'm looking for. Happy editing, SilverTiger12 (talk) 18:45, 29 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SilverTiger12: I've received the scan. It's short enough that I'll just transcribe it here:
[...]
105. On a Collection of Siwalik Carnivora
Abu Bakr
Department of Zoology, University of the Punjab, Lahore
In the Department of Zoology, Punjab University, the total number of the speciments of fossil Carnivora is eighteen. More collection was made last year. The total number of species that discovered is sixteen. Of these four i.e. Vishnucyon nagriensis, Sivaonyx minor, Lycaena felina and Panthera dhokpathanensis are new. The other speciments also given additional information about the known species. The work has been carried out under Pakistan Foundation, Project No. P-PU/Bio (102).
Oh right, hmm... Should I try requesting an inter-library loan and see if my university's librarians can figure something out, perhaps borrowing it or getting a scan from the National Library of Pakistan? Solomon Ucko (talk) 01:08, 4 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Makes sense. I've submitted a request for it. I'll let you know when I get any updates. I'm required to give a deadline, so I gave them about 6 months, since this could be slow. Solomon Ucko (talk) 07:01, 4 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Status update to keep this thread from going stale: My ILL request is still active, though the last status update was my university's libraries sending a manual request to some library (presumably the National Library of Pakistan?) on February 14th. I'm not sure how long this might take, but I hope I'll get it eventually...
Meanwhile, my difficulty in finding this one inspired me to compile a table of all of the information I could find about all of their monographs: Biological Society of Pakistan#Monographs.
To editor SilverTiger12: Issues of De Ingenieur in Nederlandsch Indie are readable here. I didn't find that article, though I didn't look very hard. Maybe that collection is incomplete or maybe the volume or issue is wrong. Alas there is no search engine. Zerotalk02:18, 14 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
For Draft:Devin gambit. I'm looking at page 16 of this source, which states that there is coverage of the gambit in Schiller's book ("Devin’s 3. g4 is also in the Eric Schiller’s Gambit Chess Openings, where Schiller assesses the position at move 3 as better for Black"). Unfortunately the book is not at the IA library, and it's not searchable on google. I'd only need the portion of the book that relates to this particular gambit (1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. g4), but I don't have page numbers owing to the lack of google preview.
According to the ToC, it could be p. 570 of the book. I found some discussion of this gambit in another of his books, Unorthodox Chess Openings (p. 201-202), which I sent you via wikimail. It is a very short fragment but maybe it will help. Szmenderowiecki (talk) 00:14, 25 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
For Draft:Boy Without a Name, about a 1975 historical children's book by Penelope Lively. (Boy was a title I've long fondly recalled from my primary-school youth in Dominica; I even taped a black-and-white xeroxed cover upon the drawing-room walls of my old suburban home there.) Although BNA is a WP:Library partner, I don't have access yet.
{{resolved}} ...but unfortunately, what's in there ultimately amounts to a one-line mention (as part of a guide to books in this title's vein), thus falling way short of WP:SIGCOV and no longer under consideration for this draft. However, our efforts didn't go to waste here as that same page contains more substantial writeups that these topics may benefit from (in order of mention):
@Slgrandson: My pleasure. That happens to me from time to time – a source I requested doesn't have much of what I'm looking for, but it has other useful information that I can use. —Bruce1eetalk12:09, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Remini, Robert V. (Summer 1991). "Andrew Jackson's Adventures on the Natchez Trace". Southern Quarterly. 29 (4). Hattiesburg, Mississippi: University of Southern Mississippi. ISSN0038-4496. OCLC1644229.
ProQuest only offers the citation (I think?) Project MUSE only has the last five years of issues. I think I'll probably just have to email USM Libraries but I thought I'd post it in here since you guys are so darn resourceful.
Thanks in advance, jengod (talk) 03:37, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It is available in the National Library of Ireland but not viewable online. It is cited as the source of Leigh Rayment's Irish privy counsellor page, which is not a reliable source, so trying to access the original book. Since it is published in 1910, it should be out of copyright.
@ネイ: The item is a 24-page index, so it likely contains very little data about each privy counsellor. It's available at only the one library, and I don't think WP:RX has any volunteers in Dublin, so your best bet may be asking the National Library of Ireland to scan it for you. You could start with a single page, which costs just €1, to see whether it will be useful for your purpose. --Worldbruce (talk) 16:02, 4 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, ordered a scan and it works for my purpose. Given the scary Terms and Conditions, I am not sure whether I can upload the full text to Wikisource though (the text being produced c. 1910, it is most likely in PD). ネイ (talk) 09:30, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Greetings, has someone access to "Hock, A. N., Cabrol, N. A., Grin, E. A., & Rothschild, L. (2005). Ultraviolet radiation and life at high-altitude: Licancabur 2004. In NAI 2005 Biennal Meeting, University of Colorado, Boulder, Center for Astrobiology,(abstract# 1043)." and "Field and diving exploration of the highest lakes on Earth: analogy of environment and habitats with early Mars and life adaptation strategies to UV"? For Licancabur
For Draft:Silas Bronson Library, specifically the part which mentions the opening of this Waterbury institution's current Main Branch (in 1968), thus replacing a primary-source placeholder from Bronson themselves that is used for the claim at this writing. CLA News & Views isn't freely accessible online (as far as I've looked), and not even HathiTrustcan help us here; a handful of facilities in Connecticut do have it archived physically. Best if an editor who peruses this state's major outlets could give us a hand. (See also this related filing at WP:RSN.)
Pity that GBooks has long been a big pain re: incomplete bibilo data of magazines, journals, and the like...
(On a related note: Coverage from the Republican-American [via NewsBank] will really be a big boon towards its tentative GA prospects.)
I have access to this book, I'll be able to pick it up from the library on the 19th. 265 pages is a lot to ask – is there any way you could narrow it down a little? If not, I'll do my best. Toadspike[Talk]08:13, 11 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Toadspike: Sorry, didn't see your previous comment. Please do whatever is most practical to you. I unfortunately can't even view a snippet view from the book, but as much as possible from "Introduction", "Map 1: South Caucasus ca. 1800", "Chapter I: Historical Background", "Chapter II: The Land, and "Chapter III: The People" would be greatly appreciated. I have emailed you. HistoryofIran (talk) 13:40, 20 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I had already requested some pages of this book half a year ago for a biography. This book lists Romanian or related biographies ordered by regions. I'd be most interested in getting pages 477–516. 446–476 are also of my interest but they're secondary, in case seventy pages is too much. Thanks, SuperΨDro19:10, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Cunard: I don't have Humanism Ireland, but your link says that it was reprinted in Midwest Book Review, Dec 2009, which is probably this: [8] (do a ctrl+F for "Gandhi"). DanCherek (talk) 17:40, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Zecchini, Giuseppe (1982). "Cn. Manlio Vulsone e l'inizio della corruzione a Roma". Politica e religione nel primo scontro tra Roma e l’Oriente. pp. 159–178. ISBN9788834303306.
Pagnon, B. "Le récit de l'expédition de Cn. Manlius Vulso contre les Gallo-Grecs et de ses prolongements dans le livre 38 de Tite-Live". Les Etudes Classiques. 50: 115–128.
Førde, N. W. (1979). "Cn. Manlius Vulso and the Middle Bloc during the Second Century B.C.". Studies in honor of Tom B. Jones. pp. 231–244. ISBN9783788705602.
For Galatian War. Can't seem to find these sources anywhere, only citations to them. On WorldCat, all libraries holding any of these works are quite far away from me.
Thanks @Doc Taxon. I would like to echo the comments of another user below, the provision of these sources is magical, I would never have been able to access them without spending a lot of time and money. Cheers Matarisvan (talk) 19:50, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"The UHF Band Strikes Up", Newsweek, March 3, 1969
I have used many Locus reviews, yes; but I'm afraid I don't have a systematic means of access. I've cobbled them together from a variety of sources, including (IIRC) The Pulp Magazine archive; Inter-library loan from a University library; and asking other editors who may have access. Duke University also has a fully digitized archive [10] I believe, but I have not found a way to access it. Vanamonde93 (talk) 16:46, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks! I've tried a couple of these without luck so far, but I'll see what I can do with the Duke archive. Do you recall which other editors might have copies of this magazine? —TechnoSquirrel69 (sigh) 16:55, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The link to Datapages is the combined memorial, but the two parts are indexed separately on GeoScienceWorld. I have institutional access to GeoScienceWorld, but the repository simply doesn't host the articles (see the issue page where there is not a PDF button for these articles), so maybe the only way to access this is paying via Datapages. Please let me know if someone here has access.
"MTV 'TRL' Tour"(Payment required to access the full article). The Richmond Times-Dispatch. Media General. July 27, 2001. Retrieved January 10, 2011.[dead link]
I tried searching newspapers.com without luck. Maybe you have a way? I logged in via the Library, went to the newspaper tab, loaded Richmond-Times Dispath, and searched on "Not Quite There Yet" (17 results) no match. -- GreenC18:51, 26 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
{{stale}}
Greetings, has someone access to "Lazar, R., Podesser, A. (2004): Bericht über die Errichtung der höchstgelegenen Klimastation der Welt (Llullaillaco, 6.739m). ÖGM-Bulletin 2002/2003, 47–50"? For Llullaillaco
"Lahsen, A.; Munizaga, F. 1983. Geología de los cuadrángulos Putana, Licancabur, Cerros de Guayaques y Ayquina: Hoja Calama. Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería-Universidad de Chile: 95 p., 1 cuadro, 9 figs., 1 tabla, Santiago", " Marinovic S., Nicolás. Lahsen A., Alfredo. Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería (Chile). 1984. Hoja Calama, Región de Antofagasta : escala 1:250.000. Carta Geológica de Chile (58). SERNAGEOMIN. https://bibliotecadigital.ciren.cl/handle/20.500.13082/22510 " and "Lara P., Luis, Orozco L., Gabriel, Amigo R., Álvaro y Silva P., Carolina (2011) Peligros volcánicos de Chile [en línea].Santiago. SERNAGEOMIN. Carta Geológica de Chile, Serie Geología Ambiental nº013."? For Licancabur
"Gardeweg P., Moyra, Ramírez R., Carlos Felipe, Davidson M., John (1993) Mapa geológico del área del Salar de Punta Negra y del volcán Llullaillaco, Región de Antofagasta [en línea].Santiago. SERNAGEOMIN. Documentos de Trabajo nº005. " for Llullaillaco
"Naranjo, J.A., Villa, V. y Venegas, C. 2013b. Geología de las áreas Salar de Pajonales y Cerro Moño, Regiones de Antofagasta y Atacama. Escala 1:100.000. Servi- cio Nacional de Geología y Minería, Carta Geológi- ca de Chile, Serie Geología Básica 153-154, Santiago." for Lastarria
Casanovas-Cladellas, María Lourdes; Santafé Llopis, José-Vicente (1991). "Los Paleotéridos (Mammalia, Perissodactyla) del yacimiento de Llamaquique (Oviedo, España)". Boletín de Ciencias de la Naturaleza. 41: 1–12.