Sunday, August 01, 2004

BiB Style

REFERENCES

References should follow the Harvard system. In the text the surname of
the author and the year of publication of the reference are given. Two or
more references by the same author published in the same year are
differentiated by the letters a, b, c etc. For references with more than
two authors, text citations should be shortened to the first author
followed by et al.

Jones (1965, 1968a, b, 1971b) discovered that . . .


Recent results (Brown and Carter, 1985; Green et al., 1986) indicate that
. . .


References should be listed in alphabetical order at the end of the
article. References by the same author(s) should be in chronological
order. Journal references should include: author's surname and initials;
initials and surnames of remaining authors; year of publication in
brackets; article title (where provided); abbreviated journal title,
volume number and page numbers.

References to books should include: author's surname and initials;
initials and surnames of remaining authors; year of publication in
brackets; the book title; the name of the publisher and the place of
publication. References to multi-author works should include after the
date of publication: the chapter title (where provided); 'In:' followed by
book title; initials and name(s) of editor(s) in brackets; volume number
and pages; the name of the publisher and place of publication.

The references should appear in the following form:

Abell, B. C. (1945). The examination of cell nuclei. Biochem. J., 35,
123-126.

Abell, B. C. (1956). Nucleic acid content of microsomes. Nature, 135, 7-9.

Abell, B. C., R. C. Tagg and M. Push (1954). Enzyme catalyzed cellular
transaminations. In: Advances in Enzymology (A. F. Round, ed.), Vol. 2,
pp. 125-247. Academic Press, New York.

Baker, R. C. (1963a). Microscopic Staining Techniques. Butterworths,
London.

Baker, R. C. (1963b). Methods of preparing thin-section slides. J. Br.
Med. Assoc., 34, 184-186.

Charlie, F. H. and M. B. Routh (1966). The chemical determination of
toxins. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 66, 267-269.

Dog, P. R. (1958). In: Chemical Carcinogenesis (R. W. Brown, ed.), Vol. I,
Chap. 7, pp. 56-98. Chapman & Hall, London.