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A different view: the National Library of Australia and its building art. National Library of Australia. Cochrane, Peter, ed. (2001). Remarkable occurrences: the National Library of Australia's first 100 years 1901-2001. National Library of Australia. Garnett, Rodney; Hyndes, Danielle (1992). The Heritage of the Australian Capital Territory.
The National Library of Australia (NLA) began investigating the potential for a national shared cataloguing network in the 1970s. The idea behind the network was that, instead of every library in Australia separately cataloguing every item in their collection, an item would be catalogued just once and stored on a single database.
National Gallery of Australia - no reference number; National Library of Australia - SR COOK 44 (SR2) - National Library of Australia - SRq COOK 14; National Library of Australia - PIC MS 569; National Library of Australia - NLA FERG 7143; National Library of Scotland - Bi.4/2.52; National Museums Scotland Library - ATTIC TC COO: Acc No. 3447.1
The first NSLA meeting was held at the State Library of Western Australia in September 2006. [1] At the November 2017 meeting, NSLA developed a new strategic plan and business model, deciding to focus on Australian constituents and stakeholders, and from 2018 the name became National and State Libraries Australia. [1]
Trove is an Australian online library database owned by the National Library of Australia in which it holds partnerships with source providers National and State Libraries Australia, an aggregator and service which includes full text documents, digital images, bibliographic and holdings data of items which are not available digitally, and a free faceted-search engine as a discovery tool.
Australia: National Library of Australia: Canberra: Yes [9] [10] Austria: Austrian National Library (Österreichische Nationalbibliothek) Vienna [11] Azerbaijan: Akhundov National Library (Axundov adına Azərbaycan Milli Kitabxanası, National Library of Azerbaijan) Baku [12]
AustLit, as it is known today, was formed in 1998, when groups of researchers across eight universities (UNSW @ ADFA, The University of Queensland, Monash University, Flinders University, Deakin, the University of Western Australia, the University of Canberra, and the University of Sydney) and the National Library of Australia, who had created several independent databases on a variety of ...
The precursor to the Informit databases was a printed series of bibliographic indexes known as the Australian Public Affairs Information Service: A subject index to current literature, compiled and published by the then Commonwealth National Library from 1945, and from 1961 issued by the library under its later name, the National Library of Australia (NLA). [1]