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6,316 Data sources

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  • The repository provides access free of charge to scientific texts from various institutions working in the fields of medicine, health and nutritional, environmental and agricultural sciences. FRL is maintained by ZB MED - Information Centre for Life Sciences

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  • The European Searchable Tumour Line Database (ESTDAB) Database and Cell Bank provide a service enabling investigators to search online for HLA typed, immunologically characterised tumour cells.

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  • The Carbohydrate Structure Database (CSDB) contains manually curated natural carbohydrate structures, taxonomy, bibliography, NMR data and more. The Bacterial (BCSDB) and Plant&Fungal (PFCSDB) databases were merged in 2015, becoming the CSDB, to improve the quality of content-dependent services, such as taxon clustering and NMR simulation.

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  • Through the generous support of The Polonsky Foundation, this project made 1.5 million digitized pages freely available. Portions of the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (Vatican Library) and the Bodleian Libraries’ collections of Hebrew manuscripts, Greek manuscripts, and incunabula were selected for digitization by a team of scholars and curators from around the world. The selection process was informed by a balance of scholarly and practical concerns; conservation staff at the Bodleian and Vatican Libraries worked with curators to assess not only the significance of the content, but the physical condition of the items, prioritizing items that are robust enough to withstand being transported to the imaging studio and handled by the photographers. In order to preserve the integrity and completeness of the manuscript collections, the libraries also agreed to digitize whole collections where appropriate. While the Vatican and the Bodleian had been creating digital images from our collections for a number of years, this project provided an opportunity for both libraries to increase the scale of their digitization services. In both cases, this meant significant investments in the equipment, infrastructure and people that make digitization possible. Over the course of this project, both libraries also revealed information about their digitization techniques and methods.

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6,316 Data sources
  • The repository provides access free of charge to scientific texts from various institutions working in the fields of medicine, health and nutritional, environmental and agricultural sciences. FRL is maintained by ZB MED - Information Centre for Life Sciences

    more_vert
  • The European Searchable Tumour Line Database (ESTDAB) Database and Cell Bank provide a service enabling investigators to search online for HLA typed, immunologically characterised tumour cells.

    more_vert
  • The Carbohydrate Structure Database (CSDB) contains manually curated natural carbohydrate structures, taxonomy, bibliography, NMR data and more. The Bacterial (BCSDB) and Plant&Fungal (PFCSDB) databases were merged in 2015, becoming the CSDB, to improve the quality of content-dependent services, such as taxon clustering and NMR simulation.

    more_vert
  • more_vert
  • more_vert
  • more_vert
  • more_vert
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  • Through the generous support of The Polonsky Foundation, this project made 1.5 million digitized pages freely available. Portions of the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (Vatican Library) and the Bodleian Libraries’ collections of Hebrew manuscripts, Greek manuscripts, and incunabula were selected for digitization by a team of scholars and curators from around the world. The selection process was informed by a balance of scholarly and practical concerns; conservation staff at the Bodleian and Vatican Libraries worked with curators to assess not only the significance of the content, but the physical condition of the items, prioritizing items that are robust enough to withstand being transported to the imaging studio and handled by the photographers. In order to preserve the integrity and completeness of the manuscript collections, the libraries also agreed to digitize whole collections where appropriate. While the Vatican and the Bodleian had been creating digital images from our collections for a number of years, this project provided an opportunity for both libraries to increase the scale of their digitization services. In both cases, this meant significant investments in the equipment, infrastructure and people that make digitization possible. Over the course of this project, both libraries also revealed information about their digitization techniques and methods.

    more_vert
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