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Post by creature386 on Oct 13, 2013 13:53:24 GMT 5
I know, but one page is better than nothing. It is a relatively old paper, so you could try to find it in some archive.
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Post by theropod on Oct 13, 2013 14:48:15 GMT 5
You just have to register at JSTOR, then you can add publications to your "shelf" were you can read them. This only works with some and has many restrictions, but it works. The paper on that page is accessible that way.
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Post by creature386 on Oct 13, 2013 15:03:15 GMT 5
Don't we need an institution to register there?
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Post by theropod on Oct 13, 2013 15:09:33 GMT 5
No, you can register as an independant researcher (I did and it worked), but you cannot acess all the documents, only those with the "read online free" in the top right corner (so sadly that isn't a replacement for that amazing institutional login)
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Post by creature386 on Oct 13, 2013 15:18:31 GMT 5
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Post by theropod on Oct 13, 2013 15:45:34 GMT 5
I never looked at the definition of that term, but I don’t think it matters much. It can simply be interpreted as an independent individual doing research after all.
Luckily I’m writing my matriculation project this and the next year, i.e. I meet the definition because I am working on a specific project. But they don't require you to bring proof that you're a published scientist or something like that, so you can just register without problems.
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Post by theropod on Oct 23, 2013 21:44:44 GMT 5
The good thing is, the shelf-papers are simply image files, so it's possible to save the individual pages and add them up to a complete pdf afterwards, as long as the paper isn't too long. So in case you need a paper that's available there, I can send it to you (that is, in two days there'll be space on my shelf again, so then I can do it).
@brolyeuphyfusion Do you want that paper creature posted (I already downloaded it)?
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Post by creature386 on Oct 23, 2013 21:49:03 GMT 5
I want it too.
(I don't know why, but something went wrong, when I tried to register)
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Post by theropod on Oct 24, 2013 0:53:49 GMT 5
I sent it to you!
There are two other papers from the same source that I can share: Speculations about the Diet and Foraging Behavior of Large Carnivorous Dinosaurs and The Late Jurassic Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry as a Drought-Induced Assemblage
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Post by Deleted on Oct 24, 2013 6:59:28 GMT 5
@brolyeuphyfusion Do you want that paper creature posted (I already downloaded it)? Yes My email is someonewhoistoolazytologinlol@yahoo.com, you can send it there (lol, completely random name I know)
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Post by theropod on Nov 2, 2013 22:03:56 GMT 5
Does anyone have the full texts of the following papers? Forelimb biomechanics of nonavian theropod dinosaurs in predation Range of motion in the forelimb of the theropod dinosaur Acrocanthosaurus atokensis, and implications for predatory behaviour
EDIT: I’ve now got them both.
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Post by creature386 on Nov 2, 2013 22:59:26 GMT 5
Forelimb biomechanics of nonavian theropod dinosaurs in predation Coherentsheaf seems to own it, as he was able to quote the the part dealing with Deinonychus.
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Post by theropod on Nov 10, 2013 3:54:03 GMT 5
I don't know how many were aware, but downloading google-books is quite easy. There are multiple ways, the one I used is using firefox, greasemonkey and the user script "google book downloader". It generates a series of download links, one for every page, you can download them (manually or using a download-manager) and afterwards add them together to a pdf-file (using something like ImageMagick). Of course you only get the accessible parts, but its definitely useful if you want to save some part of a book. Also there are many papers actually fully or almost fully visible in Google Books, even if you find them nowhere else. creature386: download.springer.com/static/pdf/271/art%253A10.1007%252FBF03043773.pdf?auth66=1383867184_1128719bec3b26e408aa09e23a228513&ext=.pdfthis link doesn't seem to work anymore (but I downloaded it in time), it just gives an error message: "An error occurred while processing your request.
Reference #50.b1b61402.1384037002.1a1b871 "I don't know, but could it be that it was just some error in springer's software that made it accessible? If so, we had a lot of luck...
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Post by creature386 on Nov 10, 2013 13:48:15 GMT 5
For some reason, there are few PDFs I can download (mostly when I click at a PDF file, it shows me the PDF online, instead of downloading it).
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Post by theropod on Nov 10, 2013 16:26:39 GMT 5
Are you using a recently updated Firefox? Newer versions by default open the pdf online, but you can click (right mouse button) "save link as" to download it immediately.
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