EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes

EXERCISE CMS 4–4Chicago documentation: notes

Click on the Chicago note that is handled correctly.

Example

1 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 1 of 10: The student has quoted from page 7 of Viking Age Iceland, by Jesse L. Byock; the book was published in London in 2001 by Penguin Books. This is the first reference to the book in the paper.

2 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 2 of 10: The student has quoted from page 92 of the book Chronicles of the Vikings: Records, Memorials, and Myths, by R. I. Page; the book was published in Toronto in 1995 by University of Toronto Press. This is the second reference to the book in the paper, and it does not immediately follow the first reference.

3 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 3 of 10: The writer has cited material from pages 271-72 of An Introduction to Medieval Europe, 300-1500, by James Westfall Thompson and Edgar Nathaniel Johnson; the book was published in New York by Norton in 1937. This is the second reference to the book in the paper, and it does not immediately follow the first reference.

4 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 4 of 10: The writer has summarized information found on page 132 of Medieval Technology and Social Change, by Lynn White Jr.; the book was published in London by Oxford University Press in 1962. This is the first reference to the book in the paper.

5 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 5 of 10: The student has quoted from page 55 of the anonymous “Graenlendinga Saga.” The work is found in The Vinland Sagas: The Norse Discovery of America, which was translated by Magnus Magnusson and Hermann Pálsson. Penguin Books published the book in London in 1965. This is the first reference to the book in the paper.

6 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 6 of 10: The student has quoted from “A Saga of Discovery,” a short document found on the Web site Vikings Discovery and Landing at L’anse aux Meadows. There is no author, and the site is sponsored by Library and Archives Canada. The URL for the document is http://collections.ic.gc.ca/vikings/rediscovery1.htm, and this is the first reference to the document in the paper. The article does not have an update date; the student accessed it on September 23, 2002.

7 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 7 of 10: The writer has quoted from page 109 of “Questions of Origin: Vikings, Vinland, and the Veracity of a Map,” an article by Jessica Gorman in volume 162, number 7, of the magazine Science News, published on August 17, 2002. This is the first reference to the article in the paper.

8 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 8 of 10: The writer has quoted from page C1 of an article by John Noble Wilford, “Disputed Medieval Map Called Genuine After All.” The article appeared in the New York Times on February 13, 1996. This is the first reference to the article in the paper.

9 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 9 of 10: The writer has quoted from John Noble Wilford’s article “Disputed Medieval Map Called Genuine After All,” which appeared on page C1 of the New York Times on February 13, 1996. This is the second reference to the article in the paper, and it immediately follows the first reference.

10 of 10

Question

EXERCISE CMS 4–4 Chicago documentation: notes - 10 of 10: The writer has quoted from a report by David Kestenbaum from August 5, 2002, titled “Is the Vinland Map a Fake?” The report is on the National Public Radio Web site, NPR, at http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/features/2002/aug/vinlandmap/index.html. This is the first reference to the source in the paper.