Geology & Geophysics
Geology & Geophysics Databases
Geology-Specific Databases
- AAPG Foundation Digital Library This link opens in a new windowThis database provides access to a number of petroleum geology journals and books through an endowment gift provided to the library in honor of Dr. Frank Brown. Included in this database are the AAPG Bulletin, over 230 digital AAPG books and access to the publications of the Geological Societies from Utah and across the United States and world.
- GeoRef This link opens in a new window"The GeoRef database, established by the American Geosciences Institute in 1966, provides access to the geoscience literature of the world. GeoRef is the most comprehensive database in the geosciences and continues to grow by about 100,000 references a year. The database contains over 4.4 million references to geoscience journal articles, books, maps, conference papers, reports and theses.The GeoRef database covers the geology of North America from 1666 to the present and the geology of the rest of the world from 1933 to the present."
- GeoScienceWorld This link opens in a new windowThis database provides electronic access to full-text articles from peer-reviewed journals in a range of geoscience areas. Additional journal backfiles are added to the collection periodically, as well as additional journals and other information sources including monographs, maps, and datasets.
Broad Databases
- Scopus This link opens in a new windowScopus is a large abstract and citation database of research literature and patents. The database is updated daily; Scopus contains over 93 million records with over 87 million records since 1970. Scopus indexes over 26,000 peer-reviewed journals from more than 7,000 publishers, including over 6,000 open access journals. Scopus also indexes nearly 200 trade publications, nearly 150,000 conferences, and over 300,000 books. Additionally, the database contains over 48 million patent records from US Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO), European Patent Office (EPO), Japan Patent Office, World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), and UK Intellectual Property Office.
- Web of Science Core Collection This link opens in a new windowSearch the world's leading scholarly journals, books, and proceedings in the science, social sciences, and arts and humanities and navigate the full citation network. Science Citation Index Expanded (1900 - present), Social Sciences Citation Index (1900 - present), Arts & Humanities Citation Index (1975 - present), Book Citation Indexes (2005-current), Current Chemical Reactions (1985-current, supports structure searches), Conference Proceedings Citation Indexes (1990-current), Emerging Sources Citation Index (2005-current), and Index Chemicus (1993-current).
For published authors of monographs, please submit your request to be added to Web of Science.
Search Strategies
Boolean Operators are used to connect and define the relationship between your search terms. When searching electronic databases, you can use Boolean Operators to either broaden or narrow your search results. The three Boolean Operators are AND, OR and NOT.
Boolean Operators
Boolean operators are simple words (AND, OR and NOT) used as conjunctions to combine or exclude keywords in a search, resulting in more focused search results.
OR
- Broadens or expands your search
- Is used to retrieve like terms or synonyms
- Finds all items with either teenager OR adolescent
- In set theory and math, "union" is inclusive "OR".
"OR" = teenager U adolescent
AND
- Narrows or limits your search
- Used to retrieve unrelated terms
- Finds items with both diet and children
- In set theory and math, "intersection" is "AND".
"AND" = diet ∩ children
NOT
- Narrows or limits your search
- Finds the term "spider" not "monkey"
- Use the NOT operator with caution
- May eliminate relevant records
Note:
AND is the default or implied operator in Usearch, Google, Scopus, PubMed, EBSCOhost, and most search interfaces.
"ecotourism sustainable" is the same as "ecotourism AND sustainable"
In Usearch, EBSCOhost, SCOPUS, and PubMed, Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) must be entered in upper case.
Phrase Searching
Phrase searching is using quotations.
For instance:
"international olympic committee"
"Utah tennis"
It finds the exact phrase, and items with words in the order typed. One exception is Scopus. Scopus uses curly brackets or braces for {exact phrase} searching. In Scopus, quotes are used for "loose/approximate phrase" searching.
Truncation Stemming
Truncation or stemming is using an asterisk *. It is also known as a wildcard. Truncation is a symbol that retrieves all the suffixes or endings of a word.
For instance:
school* retrieves school, schools, schooling, schooled, etc.
latin* retrieves latina, latino, latinx, latinos, latinas, latin, latinization, etc.
Note:
In the Library of Congress, % (percent sign) is a single character wildcard and ? (question mark) is truncation for multiple characters.
Nesting
Nesting is commonly used when combining more than one Boolean operator (OR, AND). Most search interfaces search left to right. Using parentheses in a search changes the order of operation.
For instance:
(moral* OR ethic*) AND (assisted suicide OR euthanasia)
(ski OR skis OR skiing OR snowboard*) AND video*
Proximity or Adjacency Operators
Proximity operators allow you to find one word within a certain distance of another.
With (w), Near (n), Next (n), or Pre (p) are common proximity operators.
Note:
Read the database help to see if proximity operators can be used in your searches.
Thanks to Alfred Mowdood for authoring these instructions.
Interlibrary Loan
Get library materials from other libraries for free!
Items not found at University of Utah libraries will be requested from another library through Interlibrary Loan (ILL). In most instances books are available within 1 to 2 weeks and electronic access to articles can be provided within 24-48 hours.
Connect from off-campus
Most library resources are available to current University students, faculty and staff from home or other remote locations. Login with your uNID and get easy access to library resources -- article databases, e-journals, and e-books.
Click here:
Visit our help page and drag the "Reload via EZproxy" button to your bookmark bar
OR Download and install VPN software on your machine.
Need help? Contact us
Phone: 801-581-6273
Email
In-Person
Schedule a Research Consultation
More Subject Guides