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In a paragraph I have stated something like During the gold rush days of California, this event occurred... (in brief). It relates to history which is easy ready online, from libraries and learnt at school.
I have put a superscript reference number at the end of the paragraph. then as a footnote I put the reference number with the words Source: Internet research, library books and school history on this topic.
Is this correct or could it be left out. I cannot put a specific item on the topic as there is mountains of sources for it.
Please advise thanks
Rob, a citation of that type
Rob, a citation of that type would be pointless. To cite a source as "internet research, library books, and school history on this topic" is meaningless. If a subject is discussed so often that it can be described as "easy ready online, from libraries and learnt at school," then it falls under EE's 2.5 "Common-Knowledge Rule":
2.5 Common-Knowledge Rule
Please don't take my opinion
Please don't take my opinion as authoritative, Rob, but I reserve the reference note citations for the source of information used in my inferences and general argument. In the case of suggesting information for further reading -- such as for historical events, detailed explanation of a term or concept, etc. -- then I tend to just use a hyperlink.
Tony
Thanks this has been a great
Thanks this has been a great help