This guide is designed to orient you to resources and services available through ZSR Library that will enable you to be successful in Dr. MacLellan's ANT 308: Archaeological Theory and Practice (Household Archaeology) class. If you have any questions about the resources provided in this guide, please let one of us know! Email me or click on the "Meet with Me" button in one of our profiles to set up a personal research session.
Use Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) to narrow or broaden your search and to exclude terms in your search.
Truncation - Use the * (asterisk symbol) to search for variations of the root of a word (e.g. wom* - will retrieve search results with woman, women, womanly, womanhood)
Exact phrase - Use quotation marks around a phrase to retrieve results that include the exact phrase (e.g. "Nazca lines" or "Kennewick Man".
Use the built-in database filters to limit your search results! - Most interfaces let you limit by publication date, subject, format and more. These features will help you hone your search strategy to find the most relevant sources!
Books on the same topic are shelved together, so it can be a useful search technique to just browse the book shelves and see what you find! Here are some general call number areas to get you started. See this page for the locations of each call number section.
DG70 P7-Pompeii
DT56.8-69.5-Egyptian Archaeology
E51-73-Pre-Columbian North America
E75-99-Indigenous People of North America
E99-Tribal Groups (alphabetical)
F1218.5-1221-Mexico-Indigenous Culture
F1435-1435.3-Mayan Culture
F1545-1545.3-Costa Rica-Indigenous Culture
F3429-3430.1-Peru-Indigenous Culture
GN406-442-Material Culture-food, shelter, fire, tools, etc...
GT165-476-Houses and Dwellings
GT495-499-Human Body ad Personal Grooming
GT2400-3390.5-Customes Relative to Private Life
Encyclopedias, Handbooks, & Reference Works
Subject specific encyclopedias and handbooks are a good starting point for researching a topic. The articles or chapters contained within are typically written by scholars or experts in the field. Using them at the beginning of one's research can help in determining key terms to use in searching the library's catalog and databases. A bibliography containing citations for books and/or journal articles can often be found at the end of articles or chapters in subject specific encyclopedias and handbooks, and these citations can be used to identify other sources on one's topic.