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Library Guides

Geography and Earth Sciences

Geography and Earth Sciences

Library resources for Geography

bookThe easiest way to find a book is to search on Primo. Type in the author's name, title of the book or search by keywords. Limiting your search to books, journal titles etc from the drop down menu will help narrow down your results.

Make a note of the class number so you can find the book on the shelf.

You may also wish to browse the shelves but remember that not all books will be in the same location as some will be relevant to other subjects too.

Books for Geography can cover several disciplines and are classified according to Dewey. 

Subject Library Level Shelfmark
Urban / Rural Geography 2 307.7
Economic Geography 2 330.9
Natural Resources (Energy) 2 333.7 - 333.8
Tourism 2 338.4791
Development Studies 2 338.9
Local Government 2 352 & 320.8
Physics 1 530s
Chemistry 540s
Physical Geography 1 550
Geology 1 550 - 551
Oceanography 1 551.46
Cartography 1 526
Meteorology, Climatology & Weather 1 551.5 - 551.6
Limnology 1 574.52
Town Planning 0 711.4
Human Geography 0 910

Always use Primo to locate books on your topic e.g. 'biofuels' titles can be found at 333.9 (biofuels & environment) or 662 (biofuels production) or 630s (agriculture).

ebook reader iconAs well as physical books the Library also has a number of eBooks - these are designed to be read online although some will let you download for a set period. 

An advantage of eBooks is that as long as you have access to the internet you will be able to access them wherever and whenever you want. Whilst eBooks are designed to be read online you can save/download sections (within copyright guidelines). You can also create an account to highlight and save books to an online bookshelf. 

Searching on Primo will discover both print and electronic books from all of our collections and platforms. If you specifically want eBooks you may also want to use the eBook platforms directly. This will allow you to search through chapters or full-text of that platform's books for information. 

journal article iconIf you want to search all scholarly information the best place to search is a database. Databases include books, journal and magazine articles and conference proceedings. As well as general databases there are also subject specific databases helping to ensure your search is more relevant. You may also consider looking at particular collections of journals or within a specific journal.

To search for relevant articles simply type in your keywords (see constructing your search tutorial for help choosing these). 

For more information, see the databases page in this guide .

Journals/ Collections:
Databases

What are journals?

Tutorial  on the what why and how of journals          Brief video on reading journals

Journals youtube tutorial           reading journal articles tutorial video

open access lockOpen Access is a growing movement where researchers make their findings publicly and legally available for anyone to access. It may be that we do not have access to an article via subscription, but the research is openly and legally available elsewhere in a different format. There are also repositories of research data that are openly accessible and available to use. UK researchers for example, normally deposit a copy of their work into their institutional repository, and there are a variety of tools you can use to find these.

 
While Open Access journals are generally available in PRIMO, some recommended resources and tools are listed below. Feel free to contact your information specialist for further assistance or information.
When using open access items it is important to understand that some open access items, such as 'pre-prints' are early draft versions of the work prior to passing peer-review.
At this point in your study, where you may not yet be knowledgeable enough to discern the quality of the methods, it is best to use Open Access 'author's drafts' where the final version has been published in a journal. This will give you some assurance of quality.
You should reference peer-reviewed open access items as if they were the published item and usually, there is guidance on this on the paper itself. There are even some established journals which are fully open access, which have their own peer-review systems.

computer screen with graph iconStatistics can be very useful at providing evidence to back up your arguments. Graphs can also be a useful visual representation of data to show trends. Remember that you will need to reference these the same as you would with any other type of information.   

The British Library runs a service called EThOS, which enables individuals to register online at http://ethos.bl.uk and access UK PhD theses. EThOS currently provides details of more than 250,000 theses, many of which are available electronically and can be downloaded from EThOS including all Plymouth PhD theses. 

Plymouth theses can also be accessed from PEARL (the university repository) via Primo along with a selection of Masters theses.


PQDT Open

PQDT Open is a source of (mostly) North American theses that have been published as Open Access which complements the British collection held in EThOS.

newspaper icon

Newspapers are great for up to date topical opinions on events and for contemporary viewpoints from the past. It is important to remember that newspapers are written for profit so will use attention grabbing headlines. Often papers have a political affiliation and this may bias their interpretation of events. 

law icon In your assignment you might want to make reference to a particular law or legal case as well as the Law books (on the 2nd floor).  The Library also has access to two specialist legal data tools:

BoB (Box of Broadcasts) is an online off-air TV and radio recording service.

BoB website

BoB enables you to choose and record any broadcast programme from 60+ TV and radio channels. The recordings are kept indefinitely (no expiry) and added to a growing media archive (currently well over 1 million programmes). 

It allows you to record and catch-up on missed programmes, schedule recordings in advance, edit programmes into clips, create playlists, embed clips into the DLE, share what you are watching with others, search a growing archive of material, and more.