Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Footnote help?

hi can someone help me out. I never have worked with footnotes before so i'm not sure if i did it right or wrong so can someone tell me what your answers would be for the following:











Brown, Greaseman. Interview by author. Ottawa, Ontario, 25 May 2004.





Black, I.J. "Black Gold." Encyclopedia of Geology. 2001 Ed.





Crazy, R.U. The Food We Eat and Oil. 2002. %26lt;%26gt;http://www.increasingfoodoutput.ca.%26gt; [25 April 2004]





Good,B. Saving the Planet at What Cost? 2003. %26lt;%26gt;http://www.pleasetakecare.ca%26gt; [3 May 2004].





Rock, U.R.A. Hard Surfaces and What Lies Beneath. Scarborough Ont: Prentice Hall Ginn Canada, 2004.





We had a separate paper which we had to read and it told us the sources and i tried them all i just want to know if i did it right, here are my answers from that paper:





U.R.A Rock, Hard Surfaces and What Lies Beneath (Scarborough Ont: Prentice Hall Ginn (2004),62.





I.J. Black, “Black Gold.” Encyclopedia of Geology. 2001 Ed.





Greaseman, Brown. Interview by author. Ottawa, Ontario, 25|||Hope the following can help! Good Luck!





FOOTNOTE FOR JOURNAL





First Reference The first time you refer to a journal article in a footnote, list all of the following information:





Author's full name followed by a comma


Title of article followed by a comma, all within quotation marks


Title of the journal, underlined or in italics.


Volume number of the journal, and, in parentheses, the year of the volume followed by a colon


Page number(s) cited followed by a period





FOR EXAMPLE:


I. C. Campbell, "Culture Contact and Polynesian Identity in the European Age," Journal of World History 8 (1997): 46.





Second Reference For the second (or third, etc.) reference to the same article, you need include only the author's last name and the page number.





FOR EXAMPLE:


Campbell, 47.











FOOTNOTE FOR BOOKS





First Reference The first time you refer to a book in a footnote, list all of the following information:





Author's full name followed by a comma


Book title in full, underlined or italicized


Publication information (enclosed in parentheses and followed by a comma): place of publication followed by a colon; name of publisher followed by a comma and the date of publication


Page number(s) cited followed by a period





FOR EXAMPLE:


Jules Benjamin, The United States and the Origins of the Cuban Revolution (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1990), 124.





Second Reference For a second (or third, etc.) reference to the same book, you need include only the author's last name and the page number.





FOR EXAMPLE:


Benjamin, 136.














FOOTNOTE FOR A WEBSITE





Because the Web (World Wide Web) is still evolving, the correct form for footnoting a page on a Web site has not yet become uniform. Currently, the most common way of footnoting a Web page is as follows.





First Reference The first time you refer to a Web site in a footnote, list all of the following information:





Author of the Web page, if known, followed by a comma


Name of the Web page followed by a comma, all within quotation marks


Date on which the information was put up on the Web page, if known, followed by a comma


The complete Uniform Resource Locator (URL) of the Web site


The date on which the Web page was accessed by the reader





FOR EXAMPLE:


John Kantner, "Chetro Ketl Great Kiva," n.d., %26lt;%26gt;http://www.sscf.ucsb.edu/anth/projects/great.kiva/index.htmlV%26gt; (12 May 1997)

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