According to their announcement not all material has been released yet.
It will be available in stages.

I was able to access an article in Science from May, 1910 which was quite
useful. It is footnote 2 in the article, San Luis Valley

Fred

> The second two links work for guest users; the first requires
> institutional subscription. Looks like pamphlets must not be included
> for whatever reason.
>
> Bob
>
> On 9/10/2011 12:48 PM, Andrew Gray wrote:
>> On 10 September 2011 16:14, Bob the Wikipedian
>> <bobthewikiped...@gmail.com>  wrote:
>>> Will this be accessible to individuals without access to a subscribed
>>> institution? I've lost my access to JSTOR ever since I graduated in
>>> May.
>> That is indeed the plan, it seems. Post-1870/1922 material will still
>> be unavailable unless you're at an institution with a subscription to
>> that specific content, though.
>>
>> I'm not sure if this applies to content in the general "journal"
>> collections only, or if it also covers things like the 19th Century
>> Pamphlets Collection - I suppose the way to find out is to test!
>>
>> http://www.jstor.org/stable/60100683 is an 1828 pamphlet defending
>> medical dissection from the Pamphlets Collection.
>> http://www.jstor.org/stable/25497782 is an 1868 paper on Ogham from
>> the Ireland Collection.
>> http://www.jstor.org/stable/25665642 is an 1868 paper on Hegelianism
>> from one of the general collections.
>>
>> If you can read all three without a login or without being on a
>> network belonging to a member, it's worked :-)
>>
>
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