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Annotated Bibliography . What info do I need?. Book with one author. Author or editors name. Title of the book. City of publication: publishing company name, year of publication. When you have an editor, follow the editors name with the abbreviation ed.
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Annotated Bibliography What info do I need?
Book with one author • Author or editors name. Title of the book. City of publication: publishing company name, year of publication. • When you have an editor, follow the editors name with the abbreviation ed. • Make sure you always put the author or editors last name first. • Example: Pina Chan, Roman. The Olmec: Mother Culture of Mesoamerica. New York: Rizzoli, 1989.
Source with more than one author • This is the same as citing a book with one author except…. • For the first listed author, write the last name first. Then, for the other authors, write the first name first. • Example: • Rust, William F., and Robert J. Sharer
Magazine or Newspaper Article • Author’s name. “Title of the article.” Name of the magazine or newspaper the day, month, and year of publication: and the page numbers on which the article begins and ends. • If you have a newspaper that has different editions or multiple sections, specify the edition used (use ed.) and/or the section before the page number. • Examples: • Stuart, George. “New Light on the Olmec.” National Geographic Nov. 1993: 88-114. • Mack, Tara. “The 9 ½-ton Head of State.” Washington Post 6 June 1996, early ed: Cl.
Encyclopedia Article • Author’s name (if given). Title of Article: Name of the encyclopedia. Edition (use ed. For the abbreviation) and the year of publication. • “Pre-Columbian Civilizations.” The New Encyclopedia Britannica: Macropedia. 15th ed. 1988.
Interview • Interviewee’s name (last name first). The type of interview (personal or telephone). Day, month, and year of interview. • Example: • Stuphin, Andrea. Telephone interview. 17 Apr. 1997.
Electronic Materials • Author’s name (if given). Title. (include print publisher, date, and page numbers if the source was first in print.) Posting date. Online or CD-ROM. Title of CD-ROM or database (if any, for online sources). Location of source. Date of publication or date of access. Internet address. • Example: • Follensbee, Billie. Olmec Heads: A Product of the Americas. 30 Apr. 1996. Online. Internet. 12 Dec. 1997. http://copan.bioz.unibas.ch/meso/olmec/html.