Citation Issues

How to cite a birth certificate that isn't really a birth certificate?

I guess my initial question is what kind of document would this be considered?

How would you cite this document? The title is as follows...
The United States of America 
Department of Commerce 
Bureau of the Census
Washington 
Notification of Birth Registration

This certifies that the following Record of Birth is registered and preserved in the office of the State Registrar of Vital Statistics at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

It was issued by the the Oklahoma City Board of Health.

What am I Citing?

What I have in my hands is a photo copy of a page from a compiled book of obituaries from a county in Ohio. The book is photo reproductions of the original newspaper obituaries clipped from a specific newspaper, not transcripions.

My question, of course, is the proper form of citation. One possibility is:

Citation Question for a multipage Census Record

Evidence Explained:

Dear Editor,

I have a question about a Census Record has a Household at the bottom of one page, and the Household continues at the top of the next.

I cite my Census Records by Household, but that might be a different topic, in doing so, I was able to identify the name of a 2nd wife, because her children from a previous marriage were listed in the household being related to the Father, her 2nd husband, as Step (daughter, son).

My question is, what if that Household is on two pages? Do I do this:

Cemetery Record

I have a copy of a cemetery record that is an application for service (EE 5.8) but includes interment location (EE 5.7) and names the purchaser (EE 5.9).

Unlike the example in EE 5.8, this application was made by the next of kin, not the mortuary firm.

I would like to use this application to capture the interment location so I tacked it on at the end of an EE 5.8 citation:

River View Cemetery Association (Portland, Oregon), application for interment of Charles W. Roggy, submitted by Helene Roggy, 19 Oct 1981.  Interment listed as niche 704, corridor 16.

How to cite history before man existed

Hi,

I'm not at all an historian, but I'm a writer who is extremely interested in history.

I've started a history book that begins with how the earth originally formed (billions of years ago). How do I write about this topic legally, since there are no original documents and I'm not an expert? So far I've been reading multiple websites, and writing in my own words.

Also, what determines when I have to cite websites I've read?

Thanks!

Kara

 

Citing images available from the finding aid

Dear editor,

In the Netherlands, repositories are increasingly putting their finding aids online including scans of the original records. We use these scans just like we would originals: we browse the finding aid, following the hierarchy down to the document we like to consult, and then instead of asking the archivist to get the document for us, we click through to the scans.

Compilation of trial court documents

I'm trying to come up with a citation for a book at the HathiTrust Digital Library website:

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/011985446.

It is a combination of abstracts of trial court documents in a particular case.  The case was appealed to the Wisconsin State Supreme Court.  I'm not sure whether this book was filed with the Court as part of the appeal or whether it was printed later by the plaintiffs/appellants, who were also the publishers.