Hi
which BibTeX style, if any, would correspond to the so-called "harvard" style?
(see description below)
and where to retrieve it?
thank you
Frederic
--
Bibliographic references in the text
should contain within parentheses the author?s surname or some conventional shortening
of the
title of the work if no immediate author or editor is listed (note that this should
correspond
to the bibliographic entry in the references at the end of the paper) and date of
publication
and page references, such as (Childe 1954:117) or (Radiocarbon Handbook 1991:iv).
Multiple
references should be separated with a comma, e.g. (Nadelkopf 1888, 1893) and dates
should be
separated from pages with a full colon (e.g. T�te d?�pingle 1902:22). References
should be
listed alphabetically at the end of the paper with book or journal title italicized or
underlined, including place of publication and publisher, issue and page numbers.
Examples:
FISHER, GENEVIEVE, 1988. Sociopolitical organization in early Anglo-Saxon England. In
Mary
Littlechick (ed.), England in the Old Days, 128-144. Oxford: British Achaeological
Publications (British Series 329).
SILVER, M., 1985. Economic Structure of the Ancient Near East. London/Sydney: Croom
Helm.
TROTER, MILDRED AND GOLDLINE C. GLESER, 1952. Estimation of stature from long bones of
American Whites and Negroes. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 10:463-514.
WILLIAMS, J. (ed.), 1997. Money: A History. London: British Museum Press.
--
Frederic FOL LEYMARIE, R&D Project leader, SHAPE Lab.
Brown University, Division of Engineering, LEMS, Box D
182-4 Hope Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, U.S.A.
Tel: +1.401.863.2760, Alternate Voice: x2177, Fax: x9039
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] , URL: http://www.lems.brown.edu/~leymarie
---
It does play with dice ... but are they fixed?