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HIS 103: World History to 1500: Finding Secondary Sources

About Secondary Sources

For your assignment, you will need to find scholarly journal articles, also called peer-reviewed or refereed articles. These articles are written by scholars who are experts in their field, and reviewed by their peers (other scholars who are also experts in the field) before publication. Scholarly articles are one of the ways that academics, like your professor, share and discuss their research. Peer review is a way to ensure that the information in academic articles is reputable.

You can find articles from scholarly journals in the databases that the library subscribes to. On this page, you will find a few databases that will be most helpful for this class.

Learn more about finding Articles and Choosing Sources.

Finding Books

Books are shelved in general subject categories using the Library of Congress classification system. You may want to supplement your use of the catalog with browsing shelf areas for your topic.

Below is a brief listing of some subject locations relevant to your topics. (Click the arrows to expand.)

  • D - History (General)
  • E - The Americas
    • E51 - E73 - Pre-Columbian America. Native Americans
    • E75-E99 - Native American tribes
    • E99. M6815 - Cahokia
  • F - The Americas
    • F1201-1392 - Mexico
      • F1218.5-1221 - Mayan, Aztec antiquities
      • F1230 - Conquest of Mexico
    • F2201-2239 South America (General)
      • F2230 - Indigenous Andean peoples; the Quechua
    • F3401-3619 - Peru
      • F3429 - The Inca
      • F3442 - The Conquest of Peru ; Francisco Pizarro
      • F3444 - Peru under Spanish rule ; Inca Garcilaso de la Vega ; Tupac Amaru

You will often find materials about these subjects outside these particular call numbers. Searching for Subject Headings using the search code "su: [subject term]" is a great way to find materials on a topic outside its main call number range.

If you don't find enough resources on a topic at Gustavus Library, click "Libraries Worldwide" on the left side of the screen to search for books you may obtain through Interlibrary Loan.

Gustavus Library's General, Reference, and Special Collections can be searched in the catalog.

Search for Books, Music, Videos & More

Advanced search · Books, videos, and music

Quotation Marks

Put phrases in quotation marks to search for the entire phrase.

Searching for native american will find results with the word "native" or the word "american."

Searching for "native american" will find results about Native Americans.

Boolean Operators

Boolean (BOO-LEE-IN) operators are another useful way to refine your search.

Put the word AND (in ALL-CAPS) between two keywords and your search will pull up only results that have *both* keywords.

Put the word OR (in ALL-CAPS) between two keywords and your search will pull up results that have either one keyword, or the other, or both.

Searching by Location

If you only want to search the Reference section, you can do a search such as the following.

Your Topic Keyword AND b8:reference

For example: Desegregation AND b8:reference

Other searchable sections include: audio visual, periodicals, oversize, and general collection.

Filters

Once you are on the results page, you can limit a search by checking the filter boxes on the left hand side.

Some ways to filter include:

  • language 
  • format (e.g. DVD)
  • date published 
  • author and subject

You can also check the box for Minitex and Worldcat to search larger networks of libraries. If you need a book from another library, click into the record, click the "Request from another library" box, and submit the form that auto-populates.

Finding Scholarly Articles

When you have an article with references, you can see if a particular reference is available by looking the journal's name up at the link below. Then you can use the volume and date information to navigate to the article. If we don't have access to that journal, we can get it from another library in almost all cases, and it's free to you.

Print versions of some journals can be found on the library's lower level.  Journals are arranged alphabetically.

It's like Amazon, but without the bills! If we don't have a book or article you want, request it through Interlibrary Loan.

We made a short video to show you how it works.

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