May Summer Session Hours, May 18, 2013 – June 10, 2013:
| Monday – Friday | 9:00am – 5:00pm |
| Saturday – Sunday | CLOSED |
All Libraries will be closed on Monday, May 27th for Memorial Day.
May Summer Session Hours, May 18, 2013 – June 10, 2013:
| Monday – Friday | 9:00am – 5:00pm |
| Saturday – Sunday | CLOSED |
All Libraries will be closed on Monday, May 27th for Memorial Day.
The Sciences Library will provide Librarian Office Hours at the Chemistry Building (CB) in W223. A librarian will be available to assist you during the following hours:
During office hours, we can assist you with:
A selection of chemistry reference books are also available. If you have questions or if you would like to make an appointment outside office hours, please contact the Sciences Library at lib-sciences@uiowa.edu or (319) 335-3083.
“Android and iPhone users can now use their mobile devices as digital topo maps, leveraging USGS maps together with the power of GPS to zoom in on their precise location while hiking, biking, running, or any other activity that benefits from precision navigation. The type of data that are available includes USGS imagery and topographic maps from The National Map, as well as road and contour layers.”
More information from the USGS: http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=3580&from=rss_home

Are you starting a new research paper or project and looking for a way to manage your references? Then join us for this useful and informative workshop about RefWorks! RefWorks is a web-based citation manager and it’s free to all University of Iowa students, faculty and staff.
Lunch @ the Sciences Library
RefWorks Workshop
Wednesday, May 8 @ 11:30am – 12:20pm
Sciences Library classroom (102 SL)
In this workshop, you will learn:
This workshop is open to all UI students, faculty and staff. There is no need to register. You may bring you lunch if desired. Free coffee will be provided. If you have any questions, please contact Sara Scheib at sara-scheib@uiowa.edu or (319) 335-3024.
Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube… The options for sharing your life online seem to be endless. But in this age of social media, maintaining privacy is increasingly challenging. Join Kelly McElroy, Undergraduate Services Librarian, and Sara Scheib, Sciences Research & Instruction Librarian for a discussion of privacy in the social media age. Share your strategies for managing privacy online and learn from others in this informal and open workshop.
Lunch @ the Sciences Library
Managing Privacy Online
11:30 a.m. – 12:20 p.m., Wednesday, April 24
102 SL (Sciences Library Classroom)
This workshop is free and open to all UI students, faculty and staff. There is no need to register. You may bring your lunch if desired. Free coffee will be provided. If you have any questions, please contact Sara Scheib at sara-scheib@uiowa.edu or (319) 335-3024.
Erratum: This post is out-of-date. For up-to-date information, please visit http://guides.lib.uiowa.edu/OAfund.
Open access is an electronic publishing model that allows free and immediate access to research, and also allows authors to retain intellectual property rights to their research. Many open access journals charge authors publication fees, which can be a barrier to publishing in such venues.
To help offset the cost of publishing in open access journals the Office of the Provost and University Libraries have established a small fund to assist with authors’ fees.
Researchers may apply for funding to be applied toward publication fees up to:
Funding is not available to researchers with grant funding that could be used to pay open access fees.
For more information and an application form, go to: http://guides.lib.uiowa.edu/OAfund
Questions about the process may be directed to Mike Wright, Interim Associate University Librarian, Collections and Scholarly Communication (michael-wright@uiowa.edu).
Join the Sciences Library to celebrate Earth Day!
Sustainability at the UI: What’s Happening and How You Can Help
3:30 – 4:30 pm on Monday, April 22
102 SL (Sciences Library classroom)
At this presentation, Liz Christiansen, director of the UI Office of Sustainability, will bring us up to date on the many sustainability efforts here at the UI and identify some ways you can help. Liz will describe some simple changes you can make as an individual to have a positive impact on our environment and identify some campus and community organizations you can join to help save the planet! Sara Scheib, Sciences Research & Instruction Librarian, will identify some sources you can use to find more information about environmental issues.
After the presentation, enjoy some refreshments and browse through the Sciences Library’s new Earth Day exhibit, featuring endangered species specimens from the UI Museum of Natural History.
This event is free and open to the public. If you have questions, please contact Sara Scheib at (319) 335-3024 or sara-scheib@uiowa.edu.
How do you keep up with the news and research in your field? Would you like to learn how to use technology to find new information for you? Join us for a Staying Current workshop and learn how to use RSS feeds and other alert options to keep up with blog posts, news and scholarly articles.
Lunch @ the Sciences Library
Staying Current
11:30 am – 12:20 pm, Wednesday, April 17th
102 SL (Sciences Library Classroom)
In this workshop, you will learn how to:
This workshop is free and open to all UI students, faculty and staff. There is no need to register. You may bring your lunch if desired. Free coffee will be provided. If you have any questions, please contact Sara Scheib at sara-scheib@uiowa.edu or (319) 335-3024.
Do you struggle to stay organized as the semester progresses? Are your notes and files scattered about in notebooks, folders, and various electronic storage devices? Would you like to share your own tips and tricks for staying organized with others? Join us for a Get Organized workshop to learn about free software tools you can use to get organized and stay organized all semester long and share your organization solutions with the chronically disorganized.
Lunch @ the Sciences Library
Get Organized
11:30 am – 12:20 pm, Wednesday, April 10th
102 SL (Sciences Library Classroom)
In this workshop, you will learn how to use free software such as Evernote and Dropbox to:
This workshop is free and open to all UI students, faculty and staff. There is no need to register. You may bring your lunch if desired. Free coffee will be provided. If you have any questions, please contact Sara Scheib at sara-scheib@uiowa.edu or (319) 335-3024.
ACS (American Chemical Society) Publications has begun to digitize the Supporting Information for nearly 50,000 articles published in ACS journals prior to 1996.
From Dave Martinsen – ACS Publications:
In August 2012, ACS Publications began a program to strategically re-invest in and upgrade its broadly subscribed ACS Legacy Archive – containing over 450,000 articles published since 1879. This included a conservation program to digitize Supporting Information for articles published prior to 1996 in ACS Journals. This project will add the SI for nearly 50,000 articles: in total it spans about 800,000 pages of searchable and indexed information.
This material has previously been available only in microform – and even then was accessible to only a fraction of the ACS Legacy Archives current installed base due to scattered/incomplete holdings, the overall decline of the microform format, or as Ben indicates, missing or damaged media. We are in process of scanning, digitizing and OCRing the files: this material will be uploaded thoughout 2013 as it makes its way through ACS quality assurance processes.
There are 3 primary benefits to the scientific and library community from this project. First it preserves and makes broadly accessible a significant amount of the 20th century’s primary research data. Secondly, with indexed metadata and full text search of the actual content files, it vastly increases the materials’ discoverability and integration into the current research workflow. Finally, there will be no additional charge to current subscribers or one time access licensees for access to this information: access to supplementary information – both meta data and the complete information files, will be available at the Abstract level, requiring neither subscribed access nor authentication to access or download.
For more information, please see ACS Publications’ FAQs for Supporting Information.