An multidisciplinary journal archive. It includes archives of over one thousand leading academic journals across the humanities, social sciences, and sciences, as well as select monographs and other materials valuable for academic work. Includes the Artstor image collections.
In some cases, you may wish to interpret as primary sources texts that originally were created as scholarly secondary sources. For example, if you are investigating the eugenics movement in the United States in the early twentieth century, you could look at articles on the topic that were published in academic journals in the 1910s and 1920s.
Books in Primo are assigned Library of Congress Subject Headings. In many ways, subject headings are a form of tagging, in that they represent the content of the material and provide ways for you to efficiently locate more materials that are conceptually related.
Library of Congress Subject Headings are also quite useful for discovering primary sources. The following subheadings usually are added to indicate that the material is a primary source: sources, personal narratives, correspondence, diaries, manuscripts, or notebooks. Once you've discovered the subject heading for secondary sources, try adding one of the primary source subheadings to see what you find. Here are some examples:
Secondary source subject heading: Chinese Americans -- History
Primary source subject heading: Chinese Americans -- History -- Sources.
Secondary source subject heading: United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865.
Primary source subject heading: United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Personal narratives, Confederate.
Thinking critically about a few initial questions will help you more quickly reason out the best starting place to find the statistics you need.
Questions to ask about statistics:
Once you've answered these basic questions, consult Statistics Sources for up-to-date weblinks to sources of statistics that may meet your needs. You also may wish to explore some or all of the statistics databases listed below.
Academic libraries and historical museums often try to digitize primary source collections held in their archives and special collections in order to make them available to the widest possible audience.
This is only a sampling of the collections out there, just to get you started!
Government documents from all three branches can be extraordinarily rich primary sources.
In addition, here are a few key sites for identifying and locating govenment documents: