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Chemistry Resources

Please visit the website for the University of South Dakota's Department of Chemistry for more information about this program.

Getting Started with Library Resources

The University Libraries webpage, http://www.usd.edu/library, gives you access to thousands of resources. After selecting ID Weeks or Wegner Health Sciences Library for your search, look for the white and red bar in the middle of the page:

 

 

Books & More

Also known as One Search, is a search tool that allows you to quickly search many of the library's resources at once. One Search is great for searching the library catalog, database content, and digital collections. Use One Search as your starting point for your research, especially if you are unfamiliar on a topic or resource type (book, article, etc.). One Search is a great place to begin your research, but use other tools for more in- depth searches (i.e., databases for articles, or the library catalog for books and journals). For more information, visit the One Search libguide or contact your librarian.

Databases

University Libraries has 200+ databases. For help doing specialized searches in the databases, contact your librarian.

Journal Finder

Journal Finder allows you to search for journals by title or ISSN.

Research Guides

These guides are created by librarians to help users with research assistance, library resources, or library guidance for specific subjects and courses.

Interlibrary Loan

Request materials from other libraries if the University Libraries doesn't have it. Use your USD username: firstname.lastname and the password you use to access your USD email to register for an account. Once registered you can request electronic articles, physical books, or other materials. 

Connecting off-campus

Starting a search

What are you looking for?

1) A book (known or unknown):

Search Books, Articles & More in the library catalog

2) A specific article with a known DOI or PMID:

Search using LibKey.io.

3) A specific article with an unknown DOI or PMID:

Pick a database like Web of Science, ScienceDirect or Google Scholar and do a title search. You can also search for the journal volume/issue using the steps in #4.

4) A specific journal title:

Search for the title using BrowZine or Journal Search in the library catalog.

5) Research on a topic you're just getting started with:

Pick a database like Web of Science or PubMed, or pick a reference resource like Science Reference Source, and search the topic.

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