The University of Sydney Library acknowledges that our buildings, collections, and practices exist on unceded Aboriginal lands. We recognise the diversity and knowledges of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff and students across all the lands the University stands on, and respect the ongoing connection Aboriginal people have to these lands, their cultural practices, knowledge systems and histories. We pay our respects to their Elders, past and present, who have handed down custodianship to each generation for more than 60,000 years.
Money, J. (2021). Yilabara (Now). Filmed on Gadigal Country. Commissioned by the University of Sydney Library
Wide-ranging collection of digital art images drawn from source, such as museums, archaeological teams, photo archives, slide collections and art reference libraries. Some images will require users to register an account with ARStor to download and save images. ArtStor Guides for students | instructors | ArtStor Resources | Technical requirements.
The gateway to Oxford’s art reference works, including the peer-reviewed, regularly updated Grove Dictionary of Art and the Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Includes over 200,000 articles that span ancient to contemporary art and architecture, as well as over 19,000 images of works of art, structures, plans, and artist signatures
Due to the impact of the COVID-19 virus, this database contains expanded access to journals and primary sources until 30 June 2023 • List of freely accessible titles and collection information offered by JSTOR JSTOR is a digital library containing digitized back issues of academic journals. It now encompasses books and other primary sources in the humanities and social sciences.
The collection contains images of selected diagnostic anatomical elements from fish taxa commonly found on archaeological sites in the Sydney region, supplemented by taxa of the same family or genus from elsewhere where modern reference skeletons of Sydney taxa were not readily available. Scientific terminology and common names follow the Australian Museum Fish Site. Coding for taxa and anatomical parts were devised by Dr Sarah Colley as part of the Sydney Fish Project archaeological research project. The taxonomy of modern specimens in the University of Sydney and Australian National University reference collections was copied from their current collection catalogues, with no attempt has made to verify their accuracy. Archaeological specimens were matched against examples available in the Australian National University and University of Sydney collections, which do not currently contain every possible fish taxon from the Sydney region. Where no exact match could be found the taxon has been classified as 'unknown'. Some identifications of archaeological specimens are tentative. Digitisation was funded under the University of Sydney Faculty of Arts Research Support Scheme. Russell Workman photographed the physical specimens. Supporting data tables for the Archaeological Fish-bone images can be found in Sydney eScholarship.
The Video Atlas was originally intended to be used by individual medical and dental students. Because of its realism, simple language, and three-dimensional quality, the Video Atlas has become popular with students and teachers in many other fields and also with people not on a professional learning path who are looking for information about human anatomy.
MedOne Thieme Teaching Assistant Anatomy is the ultimate web-based presentation tool, featuring powerful functionality to enrich and deepen the classroom experience. It features over 2,800+ full-color illustrations from Gilroy et al.’s Atlas of Anatomy, Schuenke et al.’s THIEME Atlas of Anatomy and Baker et al.’s Anatomy for Dental Medicine.
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