Ex Libris: Annotating Books from the William A. Clark Memorial LibraryMain MenuIntroductionIntroduction by Professor McClendon, with a map and a timeline of annotated books included in this course project.Student ProjectsMuriel C. McClendon7d0d078698cd80d923d8ef12ec1584c2cc8c35e2Jonathan Abraham1951edb1c10a4e0fd1d4c6055bc120deaec1ac3eLuis Alonso224e5f6e7a735c76336fa3dd876079621b634152David Perez Hernandezf35a4d075920538e1a642ce5ad79e60ad2cfad23Adam Jacobsendb1596193330f6ec27a260c3b1c0516e5b16e336Kyle Martinich969d84e3df940a458ce331be950dc44cb6cf190aArthur Ian Michiec975d52e0462a57a8b1be034c3b720b039744e53Pierce Monahan00718a49b8540237c348cef2d7e1bdf22cc5cafbCarson Turnerbe5a97c4b1fb2f144cd3788a6dd117d2485fe221Raymond Valdeze8c1ee8b19789548651d2769a9f2026c455c2f92
Ephēmeris, or, A diary, astronomical, astrological, meteorological, for the year of our Lord, MDCLXXXIV (dedication page)
12021-04-24T13:42:59-07:00This is an annotation5plain2021-04-24T13:54:10-07:00 Transcription A text in italics will indicate what the passage actually says. This helps the reader to understand what they are looking at.
Comment A Scalar annotation should have several components. If the handwriting in the area highlighted is difficult to read, it should have a transcription first. Then, it should have a brief observation of the detail (what it is), followed by a plausible interpretation of that detail. Some annotations might have media for comparative illustration, like this: