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Environmental Sciences

This guide serves the Duke community (students, staff, and faculty) in supporting research in environmental sciences.

FAQs

The majority of our electronic databases and journals are restricted for use only by Duke faculty, staff, and students. If you are on campus, the library automatically recognizes your IP address (or sometimes asks for your net ID in order to authenticate).

However, if you are off campus, you will need to log in with your net ID in order to be authenticated, and some resources may even require you to log on using Duke's VPN software.

Journal: Be sure that you are looking in both the catalog for the journal and not just through the Online Journal Titles list. While most of our scientific journals are available online, we have many titles (especially older volumes) in print format. Most of these older print journals are located off-site at the Library Services Center (LSC) and will need to be requested. If we don't have your desired journal, you can request the individual article through Interlibrary Request (see below).

Book: If you can't locate the book in the catalog, you can request it through Interlibrary Loan. Use your Duke net ID to log into your Interlibrary Loan Account and be sure to specify as much information as you can about the desired book. If there is a resource you think Duke Libraries should purchase, please submit a Suggest a Purchase form.

Our professional libraries and their staff can help you find resources specific to environment policy and legislation, market research, and other industry information. Check out Fuqua Business School's Ford Library and the Goodson Law Library.

The Goodson Law Library has an Environmental Law Research Guide that may be helpful. Ford Library subscribes to several databases related to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) scores of major companies.

Yes! Duke supports EndNote, Zotero, and RefWorks. Within the sciences, EndNote and Zotero tend to be the most popular. Duke offers access to EndNote, while Zotero is freely available online.

Check out the section on Citing Sources for tutorials on how to use these tools.

Bypassing paywalls


Did you know you can link Google Scholar to Duke University Libraries?

  1. Go to Google Scholar
  2. Click the hamburger menu (☰) in the upper left corner of the screen
  3. Click Settings then Library links
  4. Type Duke and select the resulting links
  5. Now, when you search in Google Scholar, the results will link back to the Duke University Libraries catalog (Get it @ Duke) and provide full-text access where applicable

Research consultations

Looking for one-on-one help with a research paper, project, or other concern? Two people sitting at a desk together on their laptopsSchedule a research consultation to speak with a subject specialist. Alternatively, you can reach out to one of our specialists directly:

  • Jenna Strawbridge, Science Librarian for the Nicholas School of the Environment & Chemistry
  • Jodi Psoter, Librarian for Marine Science (Head of the Marine Lab Library)

Be sure to check out our other research guides for interdisciplinary research areas.