Primary sources provide first-hand observations or direct evidence concerning a topic under investigation. They are created by witnesses or recorders at or near the time of the event. They have not been filtered through further interpretation or evaluation.
Primary sources may include
Original Documents: diaries, speeches, letters, interview transcripts, news footage, autobiographies, reports, census records, data from an experiment
Creative Works: poetry, plays, novels, music scores, films, paintings
Objects: clothing, buildings, tools, furniture
Secondary sources are works that analyze, assess or interpret a historical event, era or phenomenon. They may use primary sources to to write a review, critique or interpretation often well after the event.
Secondary sources may include
Tertiary Sources are those used to identify and locate primary and secondary sources.
Tertiary sources may include
Describes primary sources and uses a historical example. (2:39) Produced by Adam Matthew & TextQuest.
Explains the basic difference between primary (ground-level evidence for any discipline) and secondary sources (anything created using primary sources) but also indicates that what constitutes as primary and secondary sources depends on the discipline. (3:53) Produced by UWF Libraries & Joshua Vossler.
Provides definitions of primary and secondary sources and excellent examples of primary sources depending on the source types AND research topic. (UCLA Libraries)
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