Style request: Internet Archaeology
If someone could produce a style for this, or tell me of something identical, I'd be (very) grateful.
The style guide says —
Internet Archaeology employs the Harvard style of referencing, not footnotes. The main rule of thumb is to provide as much information as possible. If there is no date, use the abbreviation n.d. Do not abbreviate journal titles.
No brackets or full stops around year of publication.
Single quotes around journal/chapter titles.
Journal/Book titles in italics.
Volume numbers in bold.
Page number ranges may be elided but full ranges where there may be ambiguity.
DOIs where available should be cited in full (https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.24.8 not doi:10.11141/ia.24.8).
Distinguish between publications by same author in same year with a,b,c etc. Websites and other digital resources without DOIs should state a Last accessed date.
Examples:
Journal articles
Author name(s) Year 'Article title', Publication (in italics) Vol No(in bold) with issue no. in
brackets, page nos. and/or DOI.
Article/chapter in edited volume/proceedings
Author name(s) Year 'Article title' in Editor name(s)
Books
Author name(s) Year Publication (in italics), Place of publication: publisher.
Primary sources
Name of the institution responsible for the custody of the record/catalogue, title and
reference including any additional identifiers.
Social media
Teleimmersive Archaeology 2011, 13 Apr 'Cyberarchaeology. Experimenting with
Teleimmersive Archaeology' [YouTube]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZtssNwAfMQ [Last accessed: 5 Jun 2017]
More here (PDF) — https://intarch.ac.uk/authors/guidelines.pdf
Thanks, hopefully!
The style guide says —
Internet Archaeology employs the Harvard style of referencing, not footnotes. The main rule of thumb is to provide as much information as possible. If there is no date, use the abbreviation n.d. Do not abbreviate journal titles.
No brackets or full stops around year of publication.
Single quotes around journal/chapter titles.
Journal/Book titles in italics.
Volume numbers in bold.
Page number ranges may be elided but full ranges where there may be ambiguity.
DOIs where available should be cited in full (https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.24.8 not doi:10.11141/ia.24.8).
Distinguish between publications by same author in same year with a,b,c etc. Websites and other digital resources without DOIs should state a Last accessed date.
Examples:
Journal articles
Author name(s) Year 'Article title', Publication (in italics) Vol No(in bold) with issue no. in
brackets, page nos. and/or DOI.
Article/chapter in edited volume/proceedings
Author name(s) Year 'Article title' in Editor name(s)
Books
Author name(s) Year Publication (in italics), Place of publication: publisher.
Primary sources
Name of the institution responsible for the custody of the record/catalogue, title and
reference including any additional identifiers.
Social media
Teleimmersive Archaeology 2011, 13 Apr 'Cyberarchaeology. Experimenting with
Teleimmersive Archaeology' [YouTube]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZtssNwAfMQ [Last accessed: 5 Jun 2017]
More here (PDF) — https://intarch.ac.uk/authors/guidelines.pdf
Thanks, hopefully!
Internet Archaeology
https://intarch.ac.uk
In-Text Citations
Citations are placed in the context of discussion using the first author's last name (or
organisation name) and date of publication and page no. if required (e.g. if directly
quoting). Where there are two authors, state both surnames and for three or more
authors, use first author surname plus et al. Separate a list of citations with ;
Whitaker 2019; Albarella and Davis 1996, 48; Zimmerman et al. 2003; English
Heritage 2000)
Ensure there is a full match between the reference list and the parenthetical citation.
Journal articles
Author name(s) Year 'Article title', Publication (in italics) Vol No(in bold) with issue no. in
brackets, page nos. and/or DOI.
Allison, P. 2008 'Dealing with legacy data - an introduction', Internet
Archaeology 24. https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.24.8
Bradley R. 2006 'Bridging the Two Cultures - Commercial Archaeology and the
Study of Prehistoric Britain', The Antiquaries Journal 86, 1-13.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0003581500000032
See —
Izeta, A.D. and Cattáneo, R. 2021 Digital Archiving for Archaeology: the state of the art in Argentina, Internet Archaeology 58. https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.58.1
at —
https://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue58/1/index.html
Open Access article at https://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue56/16/ . Check the italicisation, please. PFD here if preferred — https://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue56/16/ia.56.16.pdf
Ballard, J.G. 1964 The Terminal Beach, London: Victor Gollancz.
McAtackney, L., Palus, M. and Piccini, A. (eds) 2007 Contemporary and Historical Archaeology in Theory: Papers from the 2003 and 2004 CHAT conferences, British Archaeol. Rep. International Series 1677, Oxford: Archaeopress. https://doi.org/10.30861/9781407301150
Boulton, A. 2006 'Film making and photography as record and interpretation' in J. Schofield, A. Klausmeier and L. Purbrick (eds) Re-mapping the Field: new approaches in conflict archaeology, Berlin: Westkreuz-Verlag. 35-38.
Cocroft, W.D. and Cole S. 2007 RAF Coltishall, Norfolk: A Photographic Characterisation, English Heritage Research Department Report Series 68/2007. https://research.historicengland.org.uk/Report.aspx?i=14579
Is that helpful?
In-text citation:
(Campbell and Pedersen 2007)
(Mares 2001)
Bibliography:
Campbell, J.L. and Pedersen, O.K. 2007 'The varieties of capitalism and hybrid success' Comparative Political Studies 40(3), 307–332. https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414006286542
Mares, I. 2001 'Firms and the welfare state: When, why, and how does social policy matter to employers?' in P.A. Hall and D. Soskice (eds) Varieties of capitalism. The institutional foundations of comparative advantage, New York: Oxford University Press. 184–213.