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HIST BC2385 Global Environmental History (Fall 2024)

A research guide for Professor Caglioti's Global Environmental History Class (Fall 2024)

What is Zotero?

Zotero logo

Zotero is a free citation management program that helps you collect and organize your research information.

It can help you build personal library of source information from articles, books, documents, web pages, and more.  This personal library of sources can work with your word processing tool to format a paper in your choice of style.

  • Save citations from databases, web sites, and library catalogs
  • Manage, tag, and organize citations into collections
  • Cite sources as you write and create reference lists in a wide variety of styles (e.g., APA, MLA, Chicago, ASA, Vancouver, etc.)
  • Attach PDFs, images, web page snapshots, reading notes, and more to citations in your collection
  • Share Zotero libraries with others using Zotero groups 
  • Mark up PDFs and EPUBs with highlights, notes, and image annotations

How Do I Get Zotero?

Add Sources to Your Zotero Library

Enter manually 

  • Select the document icon in the top left of your Zotero library screen.
  • Select material type from the dropdown menu.
  • Enter information in the pane on the right hand side of the Zotero window.

Import from your favorite database 

  • Make sure the Zotero application is open.
  • Make sure you have the connector for your search engine installed.
  • Conduct a search and click on the Zotero icon in your browser.
    • The Zotero icon changes its appearance depending on the type of source being accessed. For example:
    • The generic connector icon may appear as either blue or gray. A blue generic connector icon indicates a "Web page" material type. A gray generic connector icon indicates that the material has not finished loading. For the best importation results, avoid selecting the connector icon when it is gray.
    • A Zotero "Z" icon simply indicates that the Zotero application is active on your device.
    • A yellow folder icon indicates that there is information about multiple items (e.g., a list of results in CLIO). 
      • Clicking on the folder will open the Zotero Item Selector, where you can choose which items you would like to save to Zotero.
  • Items will be saved immediately in your Zotero library. Drag the reference to the appropriate Zotero collection if you have created any.
  • You can also export a citation using the RIS file option if available.

Upload PDFs 

  • If you have downloaded PDFs of articles or books from library databases or publisher websites, Zotero can often find the citation metadata attached to them.
    • Note: This will not work on an optically scanned image PDF.
  • There are two ways to add your PDFs:
    • Drag and drop a PDF into your Zotero library. After a few seconds, Zotero may find and add the citation information. If the citation information does not after a few seconds, right-click and select 'Retrieve metadata for PDF'

OR

  • Select the document icon in the top middle of your Zotero library screen and then 'Link to file'. Upload the file. After a few seconds, Zotero may find and add the citation information. If the citation information does not after a few seconds, right-click and select 'Retrieve metadata for PDF'. 

Use Identifier Numbers (DOI, PMID, ISBN, arXiv) 

  • Use this if you have a DOI, PubMed ID (PMID), ISBN, or arXiv number.
  • Select the magic wand icon in the top middle of your Zotero library screen.
  • Enter the number into the pop up window that appears at the top of your browser.

Create a Bibliography in Zotero

So easy!

  • Highlight one or more references in your Zotero library, or select a collection.
  • Right click (or control-click on Macs) to select 'Create Bibliography from Selected Item(s).'
  • Select a citation style for your bibliography format and choose an output format. 
  • The default export is to a RTF file - you might find it easier to Copy to Clipboard and then paste the list in your paper.
  • Here is an example of a bibliography produced by Zotero and pasted into Google Docs:

Cite While You Write a Paper Using Zotero

Google Docs

  • The first time you use Zotero in google docs, you'll need to authenticate the plugin with your Google account.
  • Make sure the Zotero app is open in your computer.
  • To add a citation, click on Zotero in the toolbar and select "Add/edit citation...".
    • You will then be prompted by a pop-up box from the Zotero app to select a citation style.
  • Type part of a title, author, or year and your citations will begin to appear.
  •  Screenshot showing citation selection in Zotero in google docs

  • To cite a particular page/pages, click on your citation choice and type the page number:
  • screenshot of entering page example in zotero in google docs

  • To create a bibliography/works-cited page in Google docs, first have your cursor in the place you want your page to go.
  • Then click "Add/Edit Bibliography" in the Zotero menu, which will generate a bibliography based on your Zotero citations in the document.
    • You can edit which items appear in the bibliography by clicking the “Add/Edit Bibliography” button again, which will open the bibliography editor. 

Microsoft Word or Open Office

  • The Zotero Word Plug-In should have downloaded automatically; see here to install manually.
  • Open Zotero first and make sure you're logged into your account.
  • Open Microsoft Word or LibreOffice. The Zotero tool bar will be under 'add-ins' on a PC or 'view' 'toolbars' on a MAC.
  • Place your cursor in your document where you want to add the citation.
  • From the Zotero tool bar, select 'Add/edit citation'.
  • Choose the citation style then click 'ok'. A large Zotero search box will appear.
  • Search for your citation and hit the return button.
  • To insert the bibliography at the end of the paper, select 'Add/edit bibliography' from the Zotero tool bar. It will automatically update as you add more in-text citations or footnotes to your paper.

More Zotero Support