Fixing references and common medical problems! Warning: for legal reasons, we must note that the Resource Exchange cannot fix any medical problems. But it can fix references.
In particular, eligible editors can use the Wikipedia Library, which gives access to content provided by numerous academic publishers.
Though we would prefer you to ask for a specific journal, article or work, we will accept open-ended questions. You can ask for all kinds of sources here, either on this page or by writing directly to an active user.
Provide as much detail as possible: a full citation with author, title, publisher, date and identifiers like DOI, ISBN, ISSN, PMID, OCLC, etc. Indicate which article you need this for.
Due to copyright restrictions, we cannot send you full book/thesis copies. Narrow down your request to a specific chapter or page(s).
Add the {{Resolved}} template when your request is completed.
Filled requests are archived. Requests unfilled after three months will also be archived.
Fulfilling a request
Anyone may offer advice and fulfill requests, in full or in part. When fulfilling a part of a request, tell others which one so that they don't have to do the same work.
Notify (mention) the requester using {{u|REQUESTER_USERNAME}}.
email a link or plain text to a requester using the Special:EmailUser ("wikimail") feature. Attachments are not supported, so you need the user's email address to send them. You can configure your wikimail in Special:Preferences.
Copyright tips
Respect copyrights and terms of services of any online services you use.
Limit sharing content online that the copyright holders have restricted access to to the minimum level: only to the individuals who need it, only to the minimal degree necessary to fulfil the request and only to improve Wikipedia. We share content under a presumed non-commercial, educational, fair use purpose to improve our articles or create new ones.
Whenever possible, share copies privately. You should not upload copyrighted copies from print publications or online databases for unrestricted distribution via open websites.
Individual editors are solely responsible for sharing copyrighted content and assume all legal risks. Check the laws of your jurisdiction to make sure you are comfortable and safe giving access to it.
Contacting editors directly
Volunteers who will locate and send articles for you and are willing to be contacted to handle complex queries or answer questions
phoebe -- can access most research databases, verify citations, explain journal abbreviations, help with research techniques and interlibrary loan. I can also help you figure out where to get it if I can't get it myself. Please leave a message on my talk page or send wikipedia email.
Doc Taxon, feel free to inquire on this talk page about Your requests. I have access to many databases, mostly free to German National Licenses. But I also consult books, magazines and newspapers for You, to help the Wikipedia growing on. Doc Taxon (talk) 15:39, 9 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Miyagawa I'm a reader at the British Library and am usually in their reading room at least once a month. I also have accept to the Times Archives and most recent British newspapers after the early 90s. Miyagawa(talk)19:50, 3 October 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Johnbod I have most of the books listed on my user page (at S. 8 "refs"), mainly on art and art history, and can help with simple requests for information and references, but please be very specific in making requests. Johnbod (talk) 13:46, 20 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Newyorkadam- I have access to ProQuest, JSTOR, ProQuest Historical Newspapers, Gale - Student Resources, eLibrary, CultureGrams, ABC-CLIO, Britannica Online, Questia, Brain Pop Español, World Book Online, Booklist Online, Brain Pop, PA & Access PA Digital Repository, Atomic Learning, and PA POWER Library! Phew... -Newyorkadam (talk) 00:26, 20 January 2014 (UTC)Newyorkadam[reply]
Masssly - I have access to HighBeam, PastMasters, JStor and University of Ghana Archives. Just leave a list of what you want on my talk page or you can email me directly. I'm also good at finding references using Google, let me know your area of interest I could be of help.—Sadat (Masssly)❤Talk☮C☺Email☯22:15, 6 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]
CFCF🍌 (email) I have access to a very large number of medical articles and e-books from all around the world and in many languages. I also have full access to a number of physical university libraries. If you need something scanned I will help out best I can but it might take a while. Feel free to mail me!
Alexmar983 - I have access to all main databases, a network of contact around the world in important research centres such as MIT, CNRS or ESA and I have a good archive of scanned pdfs of scientific books.--Alexmar983 (talk) 05:48, 11 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
FourViolas - Harvard's resources: world-class book collection, and pretty good online journal article access. Search here to see if I can help. Willing to scan short selections. Delay may be several days to weeks during busy times of the school year. FourViolas (talk) 13:40, 6 August 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Buidhe I have access to many databases, including JSTOR, Project MUSE, ProQuest Ebook Central, Cambridge University Press, New York Times (current and archives), and Taylor & Francis journals, via my university. buidhe06:36, 14 January 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Seraphimblade I have access to many journals and academic databases, to newspapers.com via The Wikipedia Library, and am a subscriber to The New York Times and The Economist. If you would like me to check a reference or help with research in any of these, please let me know. SeraphimbladeTalk to me05:07, 22 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Bilorv: I have access to newspaperarchive.com through The Wikipedia Library and access to ProQuest Ebook Central, along with some other databases, through my university. — Bilorv (talk) 12:13, 26 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Eddie891 -- I've got access to the Cornell University Library collection and their online resources, as well as T&F and Newspapers.com through The Wikipedia Library, not to mention a few online databases like Newspaperarchive.com via the NYPL and my local library. Eddie891TalkWork13:15, 26 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Harry Mitchell: I have access to JSTOR, ODNB, ProQuest (via TWL), and [many (many) books covering war memorials, architecture, policing, railways, and some related subjects; see User:HJ Mitchell/Library.
TheAafi: I have access to Almanhal, JSTOR, Edinburgh, Cambridge and several others (via TWL), and the central library of Jamia Millia Islamia (offline). I may help with resources needed for Darul Uloom Deoband, Jamia Millia Islamia, or any other associated issues, people, etc.
Bsoyka: I have access to quite a few resources through TWL; see a full list on my user page.
Temerarius:I have primary sources on ANE inscriptions and lexicons for Semitic languages. Ask me for pages from dictionaries to help trace word attestations, etymologies. Akkadian, Ugaritic, Sumerian, etc. KAI, KTU / CAT, etc. Temerarius (talk) 22:58, 31 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Shared sources: Editors post sources they are willing to share access to at the shared resources page.
New requests
October 2023
1906 article in Arts and Crafts
Maryon, Herbert (March 1906). "Metal Work". Arts and Crafts.
According to the below article, The March number of "Arts and Crafts" is, as usual, full of articles which are intended to provide students and art workers with useful information on a variety of subjects in which they are interested. The most important of these articles are "Various Methods of Finishing Oak," by Mr. W. Daniell; "Metal Work," by Mr. H. J. Maryon; "Practical Talks about Wood-Carving," by Mr. H. Turner; "Inlaying," by Mr. A[rthur] C[awdron] Horth; and "Bookbinding," by Mr. F. Sangorski and Mr. G. Sutcliffe. Among the more notable illustrations are reproductions of drawings by Henner, E. Detaille, and Feyen Perrin.
The starting point is to figure out what journal this is—a task not helped by its generic name. There's a good chance that this is a small journal that didn't last long. The article would be Maryon's second published work that I'm aware of, five months after "Early Irish Metal Work", in another small journal. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks, Usernameunique (talk) 01:42, 24 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks very much for that, Eddie891. I think you're right. I sent an email to a library that looks like it has a copy of the issue in question, but didn't receive a response. I've now submitted an ILL request, so hopefully that will both prove you right, and get the article. --Usernameunique (talk) 05:53, 26 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
How's this going? If you're having trouble with the ILL, I should be able to request an ILL for OCLC225804755 pretty easily, as my university is within the Big Ten Academic Alliance, and so is one of the libraries that has it. If you received it but it's not the right magazine, if you send me the full newspaper article that prompted your search, I can try to figure out what else it might be. Solomon Ucko (talk) 06:24, 16 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, Sollyucko. Would you mind giving it a go? My library claims that the ILL was unsuccessful; I could try submitting it again, but perhaps you would have better luck if a copy is already within your system. --Usernameunique (talk) 20:19, 31 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Two of these are academic libraries in the US, so I think there's a decent chance of success. My university's ILL department is a bit busy currently, but I'll submit it in a few days and see what happens. If you contact me via Special:EmailUser, I'll send you the scan I receive, if it's successful.
I've submitted an ILL request myself. It might be more complicated than I originally thought, but hopefully they can figure it out without too much difficulty... I'm just confused how issue and volume numbers correspond with months and years... Solomon Ucko (talk) 13:58, 5 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Comparing earlier mentions of Arts and Crafts in The Globe with https://archive.org/details/artscrafts01londuoft confirms that the publisher is Hutchinson & Co. The listing in the catalog of the National Library of Scotland indicates that this is v. 4, no. 22.
My request "has been cancelled by ILL staff for the following reason: Unable to find supplier / The only library that owns this particular year has it as an electronic subscription and they do not have the license to lend it."
I've replied to ask if they can at least provide metadata, as well as sending them a list of libraries that seem to have it in print, narrowed down to Queen's, NLS, and Cambridge, which say they have vol. 4.
Holl, Philippe; Flahaut, Patrick (2007). La seconde guerre mondiale au Touquet (in French). Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire: Éditions Alan Sutton. ISBN978-2-84910-692-1.
The first article is available through OpenEdition, but The Wikipedia Library access to it is broken, hence my request.The second and third books are very likely offline, and I don't have relevant pages, so I'd appreciate someone with ILL (buying ILL vouchers). Obviously I cannot and will not request everything, but I need some info about what was happening, how many Germans were living in that city, what they were doing there, what did they do with the women, elderly and children who remained in the resort, preparations for the Atlantic Wall as relevant to the city and the reason why Le Touquet was so densely mined even though it had little intrinsic military value. Any relevant excerpts that will reflect on this issue will be welcome. I want to make a text that's max 2 paragraphs, beginning from the internment order of enemy males under 60.
Thanks for the ping. It seems that their page is moribund, as it doesn't even get a dozen edits every year. I would definitely have asked them (I had a book or two to ask about Maurice Duplessis but I ultimately decided not to waste my time. Szmenderowiecki (talk) 23:00, 28 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Szmenderowiecki: Hmm, fair enough... My French is limited, but I can try to help. Are you still interested in this? If so, please contact me via Special:EmailUser so I can send you files, and I'll try to request these via ILL; when I receive them, I'll send you the front and back matter. I can try to search for relevant information myself, but if you're able to provide any guidance on where I should look, I would appreciate it. Worst case, I'll just send you the introduction and conclusion in hopes that there's something useful in there. Unless you request otherwise, I'll wait about a week after sending you content before I return the book.
I am still working on my sandbox, so yes, I'd greatly appreciate your efforts there.
The problem is that no library in my country has the books, and pdfs are nowhere to be found. So preferably if you have somebody in France, either in Paris (National Library) or in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region, where the town is located, I guess they would have both of the books. Also, because you seem to be based in the United States, check if the Library of Congress has the books, because interlibrary loans to an American library are free, and the LoC has a shitton of everything.
When you get hold of them, send me the ToC and the index (if the books have one), and I will tell more or less what I am looking for.
I am indeed in the US, and am a student at a university here. I can request ILL through my university's library system (as I've been doing) or through my county's public libraries. According to WorldCat, these books don't seem to be in the LoC, but Harvard has both and Stanford has one of them, so it should be doable nevertheless.
I've requested both through my university. When I get them, I'll send you photos of any front and back matter, including any ToCs and indices, and you can let me know which parts you think would be most useful. Weighing copyright vs fair use according to related legal precedent, I'm okay with sending you up to about 10% of the content, not counting front/back matter.
Sollyucko After some consultation with the French colleagues over at fr.wiki, I was able to fill the necessary gaps in coverage about the city, so the article is now essentially ready and there isn't much need for more sources. Of course, if you started an ILL, then I'd kindly ask to continue this request (particularly #3
@Szmenderowiecki: Got it, sounds good, thanks for letting me know.
I've already requested both books, and they're now on their way and should arrive in a few days or so, so I won't cancel my requests unless issues arise.
When they arrive, I'll send you the front and back matter, and you can let me know if there's anything you think might be useful for that article or any other article you'd like to work on.
I can try to request this by interlibrary loan, but do you have any idea what page numbers might be useful? If not, I can try to request the whole thing, but I'm not sure how successful that'll be, given the limited holdings (see OCLC16257906) and possible copyright issues with scanning the whole thing. If you're not sure what the page numbers are, and I can't get the whole thing, I'll try asking for a table of contents and/or index (hopefully it has something like that), and then we can use that to figure out what page numbers to ask for.
I don‘t really know if there is any content in this book relating to my topic but I think it should be at the end (April 1945…). So I unfortunately don‘t know which pages are relevant. The table of content/ index could be helpful here if it exist.
I‘m appreciate your help. Maybe you have luck to get the whole book.
Don‘t know if the copyright thing is the same as it is for some photos of the US Army Signal Corps??
„ This file is a work of a U.S. Army soldier or employee, taken or made as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, it is in the public domain in the United States.“
@Archivar-Alex: Yeah, makes sense. It is created by a US Army soldier, but I'm not sure if it's considered part of their official duties. Anyways, I've attempted to request this, and I'll let you know what response I get. Please email me so I can send you files.
@Archivar-Alex: I've submitted a request to my university's libraries, who after some back-and-forth, eventually sent a request along to some other library mid-day on March 28th, and are either waiting for a response or taking time to process it. Unfortunately, the amount of time these requests take can vary wildly, depending on various visible and invisible factors, so I don't think I can usefully give you an estimate (though my best guess would be at least a couple of weeks since I think they're going to ship the physical item), but I'm hoping I can get it eventually.
@Archivar-Alex: I've received the whole thing. Skimming through it, I see no mention of "Geislingen", "Natweiler", or "Struhof", though I do see some brief mentions of their presence in or near Göppingen.
Apparently, goddess Hathor was also associated with turquoise. Cf. Khazeni, Arash (2014). Sky Blue Stone: The Turquoise Trade in World History. Univ of California Press. pp. 20–21, 95–98. ISBN9780520958357. KHR FolkMyth (talk) 01:37, 5 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
April 2024
Door in the tunnel of the Cheops pyramid
It seems they wanted to open the second doors at the end of the ventilation shafts of the Queen's chamber - is there any news on this topic? --Vyacheslav84 (talk) 16:34, 1 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Vyacheslav84: You can try asking that question on the of Ma'at as a post in the Ancient Egypt discussion Forum for an informed answer. Also, do not forget to mention that you are looking for reliable sources for editing Wikipedia. If you don't get a response by doing that, I know people whom I can ask directly about it. Paul H. (talk) 01:36, 17 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Vyacheslav84: "The forum does not allow you to register..." There are ongoing problems with the site's coding for registration and login. I myself have been oceassionally locked out at login even though I am a registered user. Hopefully, it will get fixed. This is the problem of low budget, self-funded web site.
@Vyacheslav84: I looked around and could not find anything in terms of recent, reliable sources about the shafts of the Great Pyramids. It seems detailed information will only be released in June of this year according to the latest chatter. What I found is:
Churchman, Geoffrey B; Hurst, Tony (2001) [1990, 1991]. The Railways of New Zealand: A Journey through History (Second ed.). Transpress New Zealand. ISBN0-908876-20-3.
Leitch, David; Scott, Brian (1995). Exploring New Zealand's Ghost Railways (1998 ed.). Wellington: Grantham House. ISBN1-86934048-5.
O'Donnell, Barry (2005). When Nelson Had A Railway: The Life And Death Of New Zealand’s Last Isolated Railway 1876–1955. Wellington: Schematics Limited. ISBN0-476-01119-1.
Voller, Lois (1991). Rails To Nowhere: The History of the Nelson Railway. Nelson: Nikau Press. ISBN0-9597974-1-6.
Access to any of the above would be appreciated, especially nos. 2 and 4. For clarification of copyright status on Nelson Section.
If someone could send me plate 191 (Shah with a dignatory...), that would be splendid. For some reason, the website only allows me to download a fraction of the images.
Is it an image request or you want to describe the image? If the latter, the Russian Academy of Sciences posted a book that describes the plate on page 110. I am sure though that you want to upload it to Wikipedia as it's public domain, but here I just think that Harvard are being assholes for restricting access to public domain documents (I tried maniulating the width and height of the image in question but Harvard sysadmins aren't that stupid, so the request redirected me to the login page). Szmenderowiecki (talk) 14:00, 16 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Use of Stars in the Literature of Science Fiction and Fantasy"
Dean, John (1984). "Use of Stars in the Literature of Science Fiction and Fantasy". Metaphores. No. 9/10. p. 91–100. ISSN0290-6635.
Not sure if it's the right place to ask, but maybe someone has the access to the Associated Press archives. There is a newspaper that mentions the Associated Press as the origin of a story about the war in Palestine published on January 6 1948. Is it possible to find the original report? Is it likely that it will contain more details? Apologies for a vague request.
@Alaexis AP materials would only have been available as reprints in subscribing newspapers. You may want to search for key phrases from the article in newspapers from around that date to see if any publication ran a longer version of the story. Sammi Brie (she/her • t • c) 19:50, 12 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
For John "Big Train" Moody. Google Books has a preview for what looks like a multi-page feature story in an edition of Black Sports (see above). If someone could show me how to get it I'd appreciate it.
Y Pickford, M.; Moya Sola, S.; Mein, P. (1997). "A revised phylogeny of Hyracoidea (Mammalia) based on new specimens of Pliohyracidae from Africa and Europe". N. Jb. Geol. Paläont. Abh. 205: 265–288.
Robinson, P.; Black, C. (1996). "Vertebrate faunas from the Neogene of Tunisia". Annals of the Geological Survey of Egypt. 4: 319–332. ISSN0365-2777.
Lavocat, R. (1961). "Le gisement de vertébrés miocènes de Béni Mellal (Maroc)". Notes Mém. Serv. géol. Maroc. 155: 29–94. ISSN0369-1748.
Y Pickford, M. (1996). "Pliohyracids (Mammalia, Hyracoidea) from the upper Middle Miocene at Berg Aukas, Namibia". Comptes rendus de l'Académie des Sciences de Paris. 322: 501–505.
For Parapliohyrax still. The first article should be the most useful but is only hosted by Schweizerbart. The three other articles are quite more difficult to find. I'm hoping to also expand the pages of other genera of hyraxes, depending on the data present in those documents
I am improving Siti Nurhaliza's article and her impact in Indonesia where she had an aglaonema plant hybrid species named after her in the country by famed Indonesian botanist, Gregori G. Hambali (Greg Hambali). I am not sure what are the exact pages for both because I could not even find a preview for them. I want to use these sources to support this fact.
Maurice Roques (1995): L'ouverture aux temps actuels. In: Revue d'Auvergne, vol. 109, Société des amis de l'Université de Clermont, 1995, p. 39 ff. ISSN0035-1008
This fan generated list:[2] shows that issue #77 of Panzerfaust and Campaign (January-February 1977) had a review section titled "Thumbnail Analysis" by Don Lowry which reviewed East Front (game), The Siege of Jerusalem, Palace of the Vampire Queen, among other games. I do not know the page #s unfortunately, but if anyone could find a copy that would be awesome. :) If you find other issues of the same periodical, even better! BOZ (talk) 07:24, 4 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@BOZ: The only WorldCat holdings are at Bowling Green State University and The Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester, NY. Consider reaching out directly to the publisher (and reviewer). He's on LinkedIn at [3]. Web searches also return a phone number and mailing address in Hemet, California. If you can show him what you've done on Wikipedia with other wargame magazine reviews he might be willing to help. --Worldbruce (talk) 03:58, 8 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I am looking to add images of the prints to Commons and to transcribe Jones' original texts to Wikisource; as well as writing and illustrating his biography here.
No scans seem to be available at the Internet Archive or Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Houston, we have a problem! While searching for sources about Arcas sounding rocket, I found that some of the pictures of it (like that scheme) comes from scanned pages of a summary report about 18 sounding rockets, published on 18 April 1961. Scanned pages were available at "rocketryonline.com" website (archived, but pictures weren't archived).
Searching for that report, I found another report, about Aerobee, on the website of rocket simulation software RASAero: [4]. Schemes of Aerobee in that report are in the same style as schemes of Arcas, showing that the reports are from one series. That report revealed that the reports in question were not from NASA itself, but from Vought Astronautics. It also contains a list of other reports of the series. The first page of document contains accession and NASA Contractor Report (CR) numbers. So, to locate other ~18 reports, I tried to find it on NTRS, where all such technical reports are to be found.
I found nothing. Not by title, not by CR number, not by contract number (NAS1-1013), not by author (Vought). Maybe it is on the "NASA Registered Content" part of NTRS? That would be strange, as only report on motors was classified ("Confidential").Thanks, Trasheater Midtier🐉(talk) 16:57, 15 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Games Machine Italy
"Review: Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds". The Games Machine (in Italian). No. 90. October 1996.
For Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds, I need a whole review of the game written by this Italian magazine. Supposedly, a website called RetroEdicola hosts a scan of this issue of the magazine, but viewing scans there requires registration, although some scans available on the Internet Archive are pulled from the website.
Franzen, Jens Lorenz (1968). Revision der Gattung Paleotherium Cuvier 1804:(Palaeotheriidae, Perissodactyla, Mammalia) (Thesis). Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany: University of Freiburg.
Hochberger, D. (1994). Versuch einer Rekonstruktion des Huftieres Palaeotherium magnum CUVIER 1804 im Vergleich mit rezenten laufangepassten Säugetieren (Thesis). Heidelberg University.
Hi, I do need additional sources relating to the Palaeotheriidae, especially Palaeotherium, but since the above sources are theses, I will at least request source portions that are critical. For the former source, may I have pages that concern the taxonomy of the genus Palaeotherium itself (the genus plus species diagnoses and anatomical descriptions, especially of synonymized species and the newly erected species P. pomeli and P. ruetimeyeri?) And for the latter, may I have at least pages detailing the anatomical descriptions of the vertebrae, ribs, and limb bones of P. magnum? It is critical that I be able to define the diagnosis of the genus and the postcranial anatomy of it. Thanks! PrimalMustelid (talk) 19:39, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Really I need the whole book but I've exhausted all methods of all legalities. The Google Books preview tells me the first chapter has an outline of the rest of them, so that's probably the most useful thing for you to scan. For User:Snowmanonahoe/Example. Thanks.
There's a mention of The Three Out's debut album Move (1961) by Dick Hughes in the Sunday Telegraph (Sydney, Australia) I'm trying to find. It is referenced in some articles when the album was reissued in 2016 with the following quote:
"MOVE remains one of the greatest jazz recordings ever made in Australia."
It's not clear when the article was published. Likely December 1961 when the groups follow up album Sittin In was released.
As far as I can see, there's no searchable archive of this paper online. But I could be wrong.
Grajetzki, Wolfram (2005). Ancient Egyptian Queens: a hieroglyphic dictionary. Golden House Publications. ISBN9780954721893. --> I don't know the page number, but I'm looking for content relating to Ahhotep I (c. 1560–1530 BC), possibly known as "Great Royal Wife" or "Associate of the White Crown Bearer".
Roth, Ann Macy (1999). "The Ahhotep Coffins: The Archaeology of an Egyptological Reconstruction". In Teeter, E.; Larson, J. A. (eds.). SAOC 58. Gold of Praise: Studies on Ancient Egypt in Honor of Edward F. Wente. Chicago: The Oriental Institute. ISBN1-885923-09-0.
Stenger-Philippe, Caroline (1985). [See below] (MD?). University of Strasbourgh.
For Hugh Evelyn-White: I have not found the thesis cited in full, but it is often referenced as the source of the (almost certainly false) claim that E-W wrote "I have succumbed to a curse" in his own blood before his death. First references to it are news articles from July 1985 (e.g. LA Times here; I don't have a title, unfortunately, but it's probably something to do with fungi and the Egyptian pyramids, possibly mentioning Aspergillus flavus. Generally given as a doctoral thesis from the Strasbourg school of Medicine. Any reference to Evelyn-White from the thesis gratefully received.Thanks, UndercoverClassicistT·C07:41, 8 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
it is cited as "Stenger Philippe AM: Tutankhamon cursed with moulds?; graduate thesis. Tempo Medico 1986:16:12." in this paper. And here is a paragraph about this thesis. Artem.G (talk) 08:32, 8 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Access to Heda Jason's examination of the Turkish Index (made in 1953) in comparison to the international AaTh Index (1961 edition)
Jason, Heda[in German] (1970). Eberhard-Boratav Index of Turkish Folk Tales in the Light of the New Revision of Aarne-Thompson's Types of the Folktale. Magnes Press, The Hebrew University. pp. Summary.
For The Horse-Devil and the Witch and Animal as Bridegroom. The work by Heda Jason is a sort of supplement to Eberhard/Boratav's 1953 Turkish Folktale index, which was done in reference to the 1928 revision of the international Aarne-Thompson Index. Heda Jason's work, from 1970, sought to examine the 1953 index, compare it and adapt it to the 1961 revision (by Thompson). I'm looking for the summary first to better locate the pages I'm looking for, since types 425-449 were among some of the changes made from the 1928 to the 1961 edition.
For Blackrocks Brewery, I'd like to get a list of the largest craft breweries in the state of Michigan ordered by total production in beer barrels.
Specifically, for the article I'd like to say that it's the Nth largest brewery in the state of Michigan. Unfortunately, no news articles have reported that list since 2022 (with 2021 data). Since that time, Blackrocks has significantly increased production and the state's largest craft brewer no longer qualifies as "craft" after changes in ownership.
Richards, M. (1959). The Fictitious Kingdom of Teyrnllwg. Transactions of the Lancashire & Cheshire Antiquarian Society Volume 69, pp. 136-138 ISSN0950-4699
@Vortex3427: For copyright reasons this service doesn't duplicate entire 353 page books. Is there a particular portion (up to 25 pages, say) that you are interested in? Does it have to come from the 2nd edition you linked to, or is any edition (there have been four, OCLC11531791) okay? --Worldbruce (talk) 18:56, 19 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In this edition, there is p. 87 about Rizal's birth and marriage certificates. I would like that section and preferably the next few pages. Doesn't have to be that edition if this content can be found in previous ones. — VORTEX3427 (Talk!) 01:12, 20 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Reppop: The third, you get with abonnement this: "Les sociétés d'édition musicale et de production Zagora et Bleu Blanc, Daniel Vangarde et Jean Kluger ont été déboutés le 14 décembre par la première chambre civile de la Cour de cassation de leur demande à la Société des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs de musique (SACEM) d'un paiement complémentaire de plus de 31 millions de francs afférents aux passages dans les discothèques entre 1985 et 1990 des chansons de La Compagnie créole. La Cour de cassation confirme donc ainsi le jugement du tribunal de grande instance de Nanterre de juillet 1994, puis l'arrêt en décembre 1996 de la cour d'appel." – Doc Taxon • Talk • 23:49, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What They Are Not Telling us About 5G - Russell Brand
For Russell Brand, I was hoping to add a section related to Brand's endorsement of anti-5G conspiracy theories. This is obviously not a RS, but would be sufficient to establish what Brand has claimed or believes on this subject.
Doing... I believe this source is not (originally) in English – I found it under the title "Chudožniki Vitebska: Ieguda Pe̥n i ego učeniki". @Artem.G, are you okay with getting the table of contents in Slovenian? Toadspike[Talk]09:21, 25 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Does anyone has access to this publication? It seems that it was an "Oral presentation", the site says it was published, though I can't understand where. For Yudel Pen and S. An-sky
Access to a Ukrainian tale about a Crab Husband, collected by Mykola Zinchuk
Mykola Zinchuk, ed. (2009). Kazky Bukovyny. Українські народні казки (in Ukrainian). Vol. 11. Prut: Instytut ukraïnoznavstva AN Ukraïny. pp. 324-329 (text for tale nr. 107, "107. Рак Іван Царевич").
I am looking for Chapter 5: Relief and Geology of this book. The preview available on G books does not cover the chapter comprehensively so it was not of much help and I couldn't locate the source elsewhere. Would appreciate help on this.
Hello everybody. At one time, Palestinian security forces used the former fishing trawler Chandalahe for military purposes; Israel damaged it in 2002 and since then it has been abandoned off the coast of Gaza. I wanted to know what his current fate is? --Vyacheslav84 (talk) 13:42, 26 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Daily Telegraph archives query
Hi! Can the Daily Telegraph archives be searched here? I think "charles ross" might have had an obituary for him in 1986.Also perhaps the Guardian, but is that a new question?
@Bruce1ee: Firstly, apologies for any confusion, but that^^^ was a test account I set up on a new laptop as several buttons seemed to be issing. And ideed they were, so editing ill be fun! (I've now linked the account.) But anyway, yes, thanks for that, but I forgot to say tthat I've already looked at NewspaperArchive.COM and Newspapers.com, and I couldn't see eitheer of them (at least my serach wasn't bringing anything up under thse tites). Any chance of a more specific link? I apppreciate any help you cangive! Cheers, ——Serial Number 5412918:10, 26 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@DanCherek: Lucky guess! But I must be on mind-bending drugs without even knowing or enjoying it, since it turned out I'd downloaded all the relevant DT articles there were on Gale etc the day before and also the sole Times article too. Guardian obviously didn't think he ate enough Kale and ignored it, while the BBC won't let Ornerry People look at their archives. Unless you know any tricks?! Thanks very much for your help though! ——Serial Number 5412915:33, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Invertebrates, mainly insects, from the freshwater, Lower Cretaceous, Koonwarra Fossil Bed (Korumburra Group), South Gippsland, Victoria.
For Anaspididae, especially I'd like to create own article of Koonaspides.While there are online available PDF,[7] it only included pages about ephemeropterans. I want to see whole paper for that.
Hi, I don't know much about this topic but I believe there was a set of non-public testimonies given during the Peel Commission which have since become available, per: "The commissioners made their recommendation after listening to several weeks of testimony, delivered in both public and secret sessions. The transcripts of the public testimony were published soon afterward, but the secret testimony transcripts were only released by the United Kingdom’s National Archives in March 2017."[8] But I'm not sure where to find these testimonies. What specifically got me looking into this was to read Churchill's secret testimony regarding statements he made about the Palestinians.
@IOHANNVSVERVS: The resource cited in the article you linked is cataloged at The National Archives here. The archives have not digitized the material. It is unlikely that a volunteer here able and willing to visit the archives in Kew will step forward, but you can go there yourself, or there's a link on the catalog page to instructions on how to order copies from the archives (for a fee). Another approach would be to contact the author of the article, Laila Parsons, to see if she is willing to share the copies she received from a colleague. --Worldbruce (talk) 05:12, 2 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Apparently there are over 500 pages. The archives will copy them for you but will charge you quite a lot, probably a few hundred pounds. Zerotalk05:40, 2 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
For Iowa Cow War. Can someone with access to Newspapers.com check to see if this old newspaper issue has a copyright notice? I need to know for using an image from the issue that was uploaded a couple years ago. Newspapers.com is currently not working through the Wikipedia Library.
Kinsman, Berin (March–April 1993). "Capsule Reviews". White Wolf. No. 35. p. 63.
I was looking to see if anyone had access to White Wolf #35 as detailed here:[9] Specifically, I was looking for the reviews section on page 63 where Berin Kinsman covered various products for Dark Sun.