Welcome to the Research Guide for ANTH203: Intro to Environmental Anthropology. This guide is designed to support your research process. In this guide, you'll find:
Use the tabs to navigate through the boxes and pages of the guide. If you have any questions, schedule an appointment with your course librarian, Bridget.
Multidisciplinary database covering all aspects of human impact on the environment.
Primary Sources: first-hand, first-person accounts or narratives without interpretation, commentary, or translation. Primary sources display original thinking and "raw data."
Examples: Thesis, dissertations, research-based scholarly journal articles, or journal articles that report research for the first time, breaking news, diaries, autobiographical blog entries, eyewitness accounts, including photographs and recorded interviews, music and dance performances, artifacts, such as tools, clothing, or other objects, original documents, like tax returns, marriage licenses, and transcripts of trails, building, correspondence, records of organizations and government agencies
Government Documents: There are potentially U.S. government documents on the federal and state level that are relevant for primary source research on natural resources. Some of these are available in other digital collections linked on this page, some are available on the websites of the individual government agencies, and some may be available through larger government document platforms. For more information about finding government documents, see our Government Documents guide.
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