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Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

Introduce data and information resources in Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, and related fields for Mines community.

Why Cite Your Sources?

GOOD OUTCOMES -- Citing sources is the hallmark of professional and scholarly communication. As a scientist or engineer, you communicate how you built your work and reached your conclusions. By citing sources, you:

  • Lend validity to your own research approach
  • Link your conclusion/contribution/idea to its context
  • Give the original creator credit
  • Permit your reader to verify your claims and pursue more information

Citing sources encourages you to think. By documenting how others' ideas connect to yours, you get the concepts more firmly in your head. Anything else is cheating yourself on your education.

BAD OUTCOMES-- If you don't, it's plagiarism. Whether you content-scrape, buy another's paper, or just don't keep track of what you're doing, it's a breach of professional ethics if intentional, and also a sign of incompetence if unintentional. Either way, be aware of what constitutes plagiarism, and don't do it.

In short: Citing your sources = GOOD. Not citing your sources = BAD.

Access to Citation Management Software