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SciELO is a bibliographic database and a model for cooperative electronic publishing in developing countries originally from Brazil. It contains 985 scientific journals from different countries in free and universal access, full-text format. Free FAPESP, CNPq and BIREME: Science.gov: Multidisciplinary
In 1766, Yale University had approximately 4,000 volumes, second only to Harvard University. [1] Access to these libraries was restricted to faculty members and a few students: the only staff was a part-time faculty member or the president of the college. [2] The priority of the library was to protect the books, not to allow patrons to use them.
In an ideal transaction, libraries provide the patron with access to search engines, academic databases and/or library catalogs from which the patron can request items. When certain thresholds are reached for an item (e.g., number of pages read or number of requests), the library purchases the item and delivers instant access to patrons. [ 2 ]
A library portal is an interface to access library resources and services through a single access and management point for users: for example, by combining the circulation and catalog functions of an integrated library system (ILS) with additional tools and facilities.
Enter a search term in the box to find titles that contain that term, or enter the name of a particular publication in quotations (e.g., "Gestalt Review") to see which databases include it. Note that in some cases only partial runs of the periodical may be indexed. Books are not included in this search.
Tibor Jack Greenwalt (January 23, 1914 – July 17, 2005) was an American hematologist who specialized in transfusion medicine.Greenwalt earned his medical degree from New York University Medical School in 1937 and completed a hematology fellowship under William Dameshek.
The full freedom, as defined in the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOIA) includes: "free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose ...
The Research Libraries Group (RLG) was a U.S.-based library consortium that existed from 1974 until its merger with the OCLC library consortium in 2006. RLG developed the Eureka interlibrary search engine, the RedLightGreen database of bibliographic descriptions, and ArchiveGrid, a database containing descriptions of archival collections.