RSS & GeoRSS

RSS (optionally with enclosures & GeoRSS )

Any search that can be made from the advanced search page (http://core.tdar.org/search/advanced) can be turned into an RSS feed by replacing /search/results in the url with /search/rss. By default tDAR may include thumbnail images (where available) as enclosure links. The results displayed will by default be those of an unauthenticated user in tDAR. Links are available for the uploaded files to logged in users (see the tDAR Authentication API for more information).

GeoRSS:

Additionally when available, tDAR will include bounding boxes for results when available via the GeoRSS.

 <entry>
    <title>A Small Archaeofauna from Context 714 Þingvellir (Thingvellir), Iceland</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://core.tdar.org/document/394040/a-small-archaeofauna-from-context-714-ingvellir-thingvellir-iceland" />
    <author>
      <name>Thomas McGovern</name>
    </author>
    <updated>2014-11-18T20:28:21Z</updated>
    <published>2014-11-18T20:28:21Z</published>
    <summary>In 2006 a small collection of animal bones (archaeofauna) was recovered from a pit fill from the farm and church site near the famous assembly site of Thingvellir  in southern Iceland. The bone collection was from a pit (context 714) and was associated with pieces of hack-silver and three (?)silver coins of 11th century date. The analysis of the bone remains indicates that these were animal (not human) remains, and that sheep, pig, and a larger animal (probably cattle) were represented. The sheep and pig bones came exclusively from meat rich portions of the skeleton (shoulder and haunch) while the probable cattle bones appear to represent a segment of ribs and attached thoracic vertebrae. While the collection is small (88 bone fragments total) this pattern is suggestive of some sort of specialized deposit, especially seen in conjunction with the hack silver and coins.</summary>
    <dc:date>2014-11-18T20:28:21Z</dc:date>
    <georss:point>64.7274391473381 -18.7646484375</georss:point>
  </entry>

 

Note: like all pages in tDAR, the geospatial data within tDAR is obfuscated if the bounding boxes are too small. If you use one of tDAR's API-Key's and have been granted access (or created resources with obfuscated data), the data in the RSS feed should be exact.