|
This page is available in 14 languages

Available to institutional customers
through a site license.
Request a quote now 
COUNTER usage reports produced monthly
for site administrators.
Click here for a fun preview of Science Classic
To view the movie, download a QuickTime viewer.
|
Sample Science Classic Articles

Science Classic 1880-1996
Science Classic is the NEWLY digitized fulltext archive of Science from AAAS featuring the collection of issues 1880-1996. It's the perfect complement to Science Online which covers 1997-today. Most important, Science Classic is fully integrated with the current content of Science Online making it easier to search the entire collection.
Full-Text Indexed and Searchable
Each article's bibliographic citation, abstract, and references have been rekeyed in an interactive HTML file. This feature allows dynamic
linking to: other Science articles across the complete collection, over 1000 HighWire hosted journals providing toll-free access to thousands of articles, and finally the primary source or secondary databases through CrossRef/DOI, PubMed, and ISI Web of Science. As a result, Science Classic articles provide the end users
with a new, more powerful searching tool and the flexible retrieval capabilities they're used to.
From cover to cover, every page of the back issue file prior to 1997 has been scanned as a high-resolution PDF which offers the sharpest and highest quality text possible. The PDF files have been optimized for fast web transmission and excellent print quality. Each article is a
fully searchable PDF.
Everything Readers Need
Science readers may now access a wealth of scientific literature. This archival content includes groundbreaking Research Articles and Reports, News of the Week and News Focus, Letters, Books et al., Policy Forum, Reviews, Perspectives, Association Affairs, Technical Comment Abstracts, Brevia, even advertisements found in the print issues
published before 1997.
Readers will have at their fingertips key articles in the history of science from the late 19th, the 20th, and the early 21st centuries such as the human genome, the genes for breast and colon cancer, and the Bose-Einstein condensate in physics.
For information, call 202-326-6730
or email scienceclassic{at}aaas.org
|