Text Message Notifications

Would you prefer to be reminded about pending book returns and overdue notices through text?  Next time you check out a book at the User Services desk- be sure to let them know that!  When you give them your cell phone number, you will be reminded when a book is due soon, and also when a book becomes overdue.  Stop by today and get signed up!  For more information, visit the front desk at the library or call 256-824-6530.

(Photo courtesy of flickr user misterbisson)

Database trials during September

We have trial access to the following databases until September 30th.  Please contact us at 256-824-6529 or via email if you would like access.

  • Air & Space Smithsonian Magazine Archive: Over 40 years of in-depth and expert coverage of high-demand topics and unique insights into innovation, history, science, technology, the arts, and culture are accessible in an integrated, intuitive display.
  • Artemis: Literary Sources:  Primary sources, critical articles, literary and cultural analysis, and biographies across several centuries.
  • National Georgraphic Virtual Library:  This collection brings together a complete archive of National Geographic magazine — every page of every issue — along with a cross-searchable collection of National Geographic books, maps, images and videos.

Borrow an iPad from Salmon Library today!

Exciting news from Salmon Library; today we are going to start lending iPads!  Please bring your Charger Card to the User Services desk at the library and check one out today! The iPads are available for in-house use only, for 3 hours at a time.  They can be renewed if no one else is waiting for them.

Things to keep in mind:   Only UAHuntsville students, faculty, and staff may check out iPads.  You are responsible for any damage done to the device while it is checked out to you. If the iPad is damaged, lost or stolen while checked out to you, you will be charged replacement cost of $500 plus a $50.00 processing fee.

If you do borrow an iPad from us, please fill out this survey to let us know how you liked the service!

Database Trials until September 30th

We have access to the following databases until September 30th.  Please contact us at 256-824-6529 or via email if you would like to access any of them.

  • Business Source Complete is the world’s definitive scholarly business database, providing the leading collection of bibliographic and full text content. As part of the comprehensive coverage offered by this database, indexing and abstracts for the most important scholarly business journals back as far as 1886 are included. In addition, searchable cited references are provided for more than 1,300 journals.
  • Civil War Primary Source Documents from The New-York Historical Society presents unique manuscript material chronicling all aspects of the American Civil War from warfare on land, at sea, in hospitals and prison camps, and reactions and impressions of the War from the home front. The collection, comprised of over 110,000 pages, focuses on the War as it was fought from 1861 to 1865 and represents both Northern and Southern perspectives. It also contains important contextual documents leading up to War and after its conclusion. Curated by experts at The New-York Historical Society, these historical documents represent decades of collection and preservation.
  • Education Source is designed to meet the needs of education students, professionals and policy makers. The extensive collection includes full text for more than 1,700 journals, 550 books and monographs, education-related conference papers, citations for over 4 million articles including book reviews. Coverage in Education Source spans all levels of education from early childhood to higher education and also includes educational specialties such as multilingual education, health education and testing.
  • Engineering Source offers more than 3000 full text titles in engineering, computer science and related areas. It is designed for corporate reference customers, and will be offered as a standalone database, or in conjunction with EDS.
  • Humanities Source is designed to meet the needs of students, researchers and educators interested in all aspects of the humanities. The collection includes full text for more than 1,400 journals, with citations to over 3.5 million articles, including book reviews. Coverage in Humanities Source includes worldwide content pertaining to literary, scholarly and creative thought.
  • L’Année philologique, published by the Société Internationale de Bibliographie Classique, is a specialized bibliographic database of scholarly works relating to all aspects of ancient Greek and Roman civilizations. Its subjects are Greek and Latin literature and linguistics, including early Christian texts and patristics, Greek and Roman history, art, archaeology, philosophy, religion, mythology, music, science, and scholarly subspecialties such as numismatics, papyrology and epigraphy. With over 810,000 records, L’Année philologique includes citations to journal articles and books, with abstracts in English, German, Spanish, French or Italian.

 

Scientific ebooks available for Alabama students

 

Andrew Huggins, student, University of Alabama in Huntsville

Campuses across Alabama are again providing digital content in science, business and engineering 24/7 through the Network of Alabama Academic Libraries (NAAL) and publications from Springer Science+Business Media (Springer).  For the third year, NAAL has signed an agreement with Springer – a major scientific, technical and medical publisher – to bring e-books to NAAL’s member libraries, including the University of Alabama in Huntsville’s Salmon Library.

The agreement covers three subject collections:  Behavioral Science, Business and Economics, and Earth and Environmental Science.  Over 2,700 e-books are readily available to students at most libraries at four-year public and private institutions across Alabama via their laptop computers, desktop computers, and smartphones.

“Springer provides high quality content with few restrictions on printing and downloading,” said NAAL Director Ron Leonard.  “Alabama’s students will have unlimited access to these e-books, which will be permanently preserved. In addition to supporting the educational needs of university students, this agreement could contribute to economic development in Alabama, particularly the strong collection in business and economics.”

For more information, contact NAAL Director, Ron Leonard, or Salmon Library Director, David Moore.

Introducing ECCO!

We are excited to announce the addition of a new database to our collection, Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO)!  This database contains “every significant English-language and foreign language title printed in the United Kingdom during the 18th century.”  It contains a wide-range of materials, such books, directories, bibles, sheet music, sermons, and pamphlets from this time period.  This is an excellent tool for humanities research in this significant period of world history, which includes the American Revolution, the French Revolution, and the Industrial Revolution.

To access any of our databases off-campus, you simply need your Charger ID and your campus-wide password.

New Faculty Orientation at Salmon Library!

Please join us on *either* August 29th or August 30th for a faculty orientation to the library!  The sessions will be held in the Faculty Resource Center (Room 233) of Salmon Library from 11:30am-1:00pm, and lunch will be provided to all attendees.  Topics addressed include:  how to submit interlibrary loan requests, how to put materials on Reserve, and how to schedule a library instruction session for your class.

For more information, please look at the Faculty Handbook or contact us at erefq@uah.edu.  We look forward to meeting you!

New Books for 2013!

Come by Salmon Library to see what new books we’ve gotten in this year!  On the new books library page, you can see our newest additions available in print format, as well as what has been made available thanks to generous donations from the Humanities Endowment Fund and the Mrs. Edna Trout Franz Fund.  We’re excited to add these items to our collection, and hope you enjoy browsing through our newest additions!

Salmon Library Archives and Space History Preservation

With billions of dollars of past space research at risk of being lost forever, Dr. Charles Lundquist is running a race against technology and time.  Director of the Interactive Projects Office at the UAH Research Institute, the 85-year-old Dr. Lundquist spent 40 years in high-level positions with the U.S. Army, the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, NASA, and finally the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Working as a volunteer since retiring in 1999, he spends his time sleuthing for past research from the Army, NASA and private papers, as well as collecting oral histories from NASA retirees and others. All are added to an archive on the ground floor of UAH’s M. Louis Salmon Library, where Anne Coleman is a reference librarian and head of Archives and Special Collections. The archives preserve continued access for future historians, scholars and students.

The race to save past NASA research is a marathon to catch up with today’s information technologies. Some NASA records on everything from rocket designs to space flight data are being lost after being declared surplus. Some drain away because the media on which they are stored gets reused – as when NASA found it had recorded over its original tapes of the first lunar landing. But a lot of information still exists. It’s just that technology has bounded ahead and older storage media are no longer accessible.

“If any university has the obligation, UAH has the obligation to preserve the records of lunar exploration and of all of that era. At UAH, we have an obligation to create this kind of archive and save this information because the university was really formed as a result of Dr. Wernher von Braun and space research coming to Huntsville…As one of the old-timers, I feel obligated to preserve as much as possible of this important period in history when man for the first time left the Earth to explore space.”

The Salmon Library Archives are open to the public from Monday-Friday, 9:00am-4:00pm, or by appointment.