Library
You may come across the terms primary sources, secondary sources, and tertiary sources.
Primary sources are original works or research, before it has been commented on, analyzed, or interpreted.
Examples: art, diaries, maps, letters, newspapers, videos and films, photographs, speeches, manuscripts
Secondary sources provide commentary or analysis on primary sources.
Tertiary sources consist of information which is a distillation and collection of primary and secondary sources.
Examples include bibliographies, dictionaries, encyclopedias, and directories.
A collection of digitized materials relating to western Canada. Includes an online bibliography of books, pamphlets, and other materials related to the development of the Prairies, as well as a full-text collection of many of these items.
Primary sources on Canadian history from the first European contact to the early 20th century.
This portal provides Albertans with access to the Gale Primary Sources database, including resources related to First Nations & Indigenous peoples, historical news archives, the Archives of Human Sexuality & Gender, and much more.
All Albertans share barrier free access to this collection. Gale Primary Sources uses geo-authentication, meaning anyone in Alberta with an Internet-connected device can access these resources with no need to log in or authenticate. You can access the entire collection through this website or through your library’s digital resources.
Primary source documents which provide insight into the anglophone world from 1650-1920, covering European and colonial frontier regions of North America, Africa, and Australasia. Includes material from the Hudson Bay Archives and the Glenbow Archives.
Gale Primary Sources: a barrier-free collection accessible by all Albertans in perpetuity.
Red Deer Polytechnic recognizes that our campus is situated on Treaty 7 land, the traditional territory of the Blackfoot, Tsuu T’ina and Stoney Nakoda peoples, and that the central Alberta region we serve falls under Treaty 6, traditional Métis, Cree and Saulteaux territory. We honour the First Peoples who have lived here since time immemorial, and we give thanks for the land where RDP sits. This is where we will strive to honour and transform our relationships with one another.