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Talk:Tertiary source/Archive 1

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Archive 1

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The way in which primary source, secondary source and tertiary source has been defined in Wikipedia is not in accordance with the way in which is has been defined by UNISIST in 1971 and taken over, by among others, the present writer. (See Fjordback Søndergaard; Andersen & Hjørland, 2003).

Also, the normal language in Library and information science is to speak of bibliografies and the like as secondary sources (or secundary literature).

There are variations in the use of these concepts between the humanities and the sciences, however, if a general terminology should be established, we recommend the UNISIST terminology.

Fjordback Søndergaard, T.; Andersen, J. & Hjørland, B. (2003). Documents and the communication of scientific and scholarly information. Revising and updating the UNISIST model. Journal of Documentation, 59(3), 278-320. Available at: http://www.db.dk/bh/UNISIST.pdf —Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.226.186.100 (talkcontribs) 13:00, 30 March 2005

Note

Just FYI, this article is linked from the MediaWiki:Citethispage-content page, which is displayed whenever a user clicks the "Cite this article" link from the toolbox on any article page. — Catherine\talk 19:09, 27 June 2006 (UTC)