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How to find chemical information

For books on the chemical literature, see Wolman Chemical Information, 2nd ed. Wiley NY, 1988 Maizell How to Find Chemical Information, 2nd ed. Wiley NY, 1987 Mellon Chemical Publications, 5th ed. McGraw-Hill NY, 1982, Skolnik The Literature Matrix of Chemistry, Wiley NY, 1982 Antony Guide to Basic Information Sources in Chemistry Jeffrey Norton Publishers NY, 1979 Bottle Use of the Chemical literature Butterworth London, 1979 Woodbum Using the Chemical Literature Marcel Dekker NY, 1974. For a three-part article on the literature of organic chemistry, see Hancock J. Chem. Educ., 1968, 45, 193, 260, 336. [Pg.1639]

Maizell, R. E. (1998) How to find Chemical Information A Guide for Practising Chemists, Educators and Students, 3rd edn (Wiley Interscience). [Pg.355]

THE CR.C HANDBOOK OF CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS THE C.R.C. HANDBOOK OF LABORATORY SAFETY LANGE S HANDBOOK OE CHEMISTR Y HOW TO FIND CHEMICAL INFORMATION by Maizel ENCYCLOPEDIA OE CHEMISTRY by Van Nostrad Reinhold THE MERCK INDEX... [Pg.137]

Maizell, How to Find Chemical Information, Wiley, New York, 1978. [Pg.16]

The literature of chemistry and associated fields has increased enormously since 1980. Establishment of subspecialties and newly defined disciplines as well as increased research output have led to an explosion of journals, books, and on-line databases, all of which attempt to capture, record, and disseminate this plethora of knowledge (1). Tertiary reference tools in chemistry and technology (eg, Kirk-Othmer, 4th ed.) help track the primary literature. Excellent references that discuss basic chemical information tools are The Literature Matrix of Chemistry (1), Chemical Information Sources (2), and How to Find Chemical Information (3). [Pg.112]

Robert E. Maizell, How to Find Chemical Information A Guide for Practicing Chemists, Educators, and Students, 3rd ed., Wiley, New York, 1998. [Pg.279]

First published in 1907, Chemical Abstracts (CA) justly claims to be the key to the world s chemical literature. The history and evolution of Chemical Abstracts are described in R. E. Maizell, How to Find Chemical Information A Guide for Practicing Chemists, Educators, and Students (New York, Wiley, 1998, pp. 60-106,107-39). [Pg.2]

How to Find Chemical Information A Guide for Practicing Chemists, Educators and Students, third Edition, by R.E. Maizell, 1998, 515 pp., Wiley-Interscience. An essential research tool for finding information about chemical materials. Very little on adhesives directly, but excellent coverage of chemical data sources, particularly online. [Pg.39]

R.E. Maizel How to find Chemical Information Wiley, New York 1987... [Pg.421]


See other pages where How to find chemical information is mentioned: [Pg.271]    [Pg.557]    [Pg.27]   


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