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Scientific information has always needed to be current information most in research libraries.
However.....trends for humanities and social sciences  are interestingly different.

JSTOR and back archives of humanities, social science titles, remain a significantly high use collection of online back issues of journals in most if not all academic libraries today.

cheers, Karen W.

Karen Weaver, MLS, Adjunct Faculty, The iSchool at Drexel University, Philadelphia PA email: [log in to unmask] / Electronic Resources Statistician, Duquesne University, Gumberg Library, Pittsburgh PA email: [log in to unmask]


On Mon, Apr 26, 2010 at 11:47 AM, B.G. Sloan <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
 
From the May-June issue of Harvard Magazine:
 
 
An excerpt:
 
"Increasingly, in the scientific disciplines, information ranging from online journals to databases must be recent to be relevant, so Widener’s collection of books, its miles of stacks, can appear museum-like. Likewise, Google’s massive project to digitize all the books in the world will, by some accounts, cause research libraries to fade to irrelevance as mere warehouses for printed material. The skills that librarians have traditionally possessed seem devalued by the power of online search, and less sexy than a Google query launched from a mobile platform."
 
Bernie Sloan