Skip to Main Content

Oceanography

Finding Articles

Search Strategies

 

  • Look at your question(s) - what are the keywords you will use to search?
  • Now that you have your keywords, write out some possible synonyms of each word or related concepts. 
  • Take notes of what you are using to search
  • Keep track of what databases you have used

For example, if you are searching for information on the Great Depression, you might also want to look for:

  • Dust Bowl
  • Black Thursday
  • Smoot-Hawley Tariff 
  • Economic Depression 

Adjust your searches by narrowing the focus or by combining research terms.

Once you type in your search terms, use the "Refine my results" list on the left-hand side to help narrow down your search by:

  • format
  • subject
  • publication date
  • and more!

Boolean Operators

In many databases, you can use a wildcard character to retrieve results of all words that start with the letters before the wildcard. Often, this character is *.

So when searching for "pollinat*", you will get results for: pollination, pollinators, and pollinating.

AND / OR / NOT

Boolean Operator Infographic

Created by the University of Wisconsin Whitewater.

Find a Specific Newspaper

Search for a newspaper by title in eJournals. Then select the Connect button next to the result you are interested in.

We may have access in multiple databases. Check the date coverage to select the best resource.

In this example, the Wall Street Journal is available in ABI/INFORM Collection from 1984.