Australian online library database aggregator
This article is about the Australian online service. For other uses of the word "trove", see
Trove (disambiguation)
.
Trove
![The word TROVE, with a stylised "O"](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Trove-colour.svg/220px-Trove-colour.svg.png) Logo
|
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/9/92/Trove_Homepage_Sep_2021.png/300px-Trove_Homepage_Sep_2021.png) Homepage (September 2021)
|
Type of site
| Australian library database aggregator
|
---|
Available in
| English
|
---|
Owner
| National Library of Australia
|
---|
URL
| trove
.nla
.gov
.au
|
---|
Commercial
| no
|
---|
Registration
| Optional
|
---|
Launched
| 2009
; 15 years ago
(
2009
)
|
---|
Current status
| Online
|
---|
Trove
is an Australian online library database aggregator and service which includes
full text documents
,
digital images
,
bibliographic and holdings data
of items which are not available digitally, and a free
faceted-search
engine as a discovery tool. The database includes
archives
, images, newspapers, official documents,
archived websites
,
manuscripts
and other types of data. Hosted by the
National Library of Australia
in partnership with content providers, including members of the
National and State Libraries Australia
, it is one of the most well-respected and accessed
GLAM
services in Australia, with over 70,000 daily users.
Based on antecedents dating back to 1996, the first version of Trove was released for public use in late 2009. It includes content from libraries, museums,
archives
, repositories and other organisations with a focus on Australia. It allows searching of
catalogue entries
of books in Australian libraries (some fully available online), academic and other journals, full-text searching of digitised archived newspapers,
government gazettes
and archived websites. It provides access to
digitised
images, maps, aggregated information about people and organisations, archived diaries and letters, and all
born-digital
content which has been deposited via
National edeposit
(NED). Searchable content also includes music, sound and
videos
, and transcripts of radio programs. With the exception of the digitised newspapers, none of the contents is hosted by Trove itself, which indexes the content of its partners' collection
metadata
, formats and manages it, and displays the aggregated information in a relevance-ranked search result.
In the wake of government funding cuts since 2015, the National Library and other organisations have been struggling to keep up with ensuring that content on Trove is kept flowing through and up to date.
History
Trove's origins can be seen in the development of earlier services such as the
Australian Bibliographic Network
(ABN),
[1]
a shared cataloguing service launched in 1981.
The "Single Business Discovery Project" was launched in August 2008.
[2]
The intention was to create a single point of entry for the public to the various online discovery services developed by the library between 1997 and 2008, including:
[2]
[3]
[4]
- PANDORA archive
(1996);
- the Register of Australian Archives and Manuscripts (RAAM, launched 1997);
- PictureAustralia (2000);
[5]
[6]
- Libraries Australia
(the service that developed out of the ABN in 2006);
- Australia Dancing, a joint venture with
Ausdance
(2003);
- Music Australia (2005);
- ARROW Discovery Service (first Australian Research Repositories Online, then Australian Research Online, launched 2005);
- People Australia (late 2006); and
- Australian Newspapers Beta service (July 2008).
The service developed by the project was called
Single Business Discovery Service
, and also briefly known by the staff as
Girt
. The name Trove was suggested by a staff member, with the associations of a
treasure trove
and the
French
verb
trouver
(to find or discover).
[4]
The key features of the service were designed to create a
faceted search
system specifically for Australian content. Tight integration with the provider databases has allowed "Find and Get" functions (e.g. viewing digitally, borrowing, buying, copying). Important extra features include the provision of a "check copyright" tool and
persistent identifiers
(which enables stable URLs).
[7]
The first version of Trove was released to the public in late 2009.
[7]
Implementation
The National Library of Australia combined eight different online discovery tools that had been developed over a period of twelve years into a new single discovery interface that was released as a prototype in May 2009 for public comment before launching in November 2009 as Trove.
[8]
It is continually updated to expand its reach.
[9]
[10]
With the notable exception of the newspaper "zone", none of the material that appears in Trove search results is hosted by Trove itself. Instead, it indexes the content of its content partners' collection metadata and displays the aggregated information in a relevance-ranked search result.
[11]
The service is built using a variety of
open source
software.
[12]
[13]
Trove provides a free, public
Application Programming Interface
(API).
[14]
This allows developers to search across the records for books, images, maps, video, archives, music, sound, journal articles, newspaper articles and lists and to retrieve the associated metadata using XML and
JSON
encoding.
[15]
[16]
The full text of digitised newspaper articles is also available.
[17]
Several
citation styles
are automatically produced by the software, giving a stable URL to the edition, page or article-level for any newspaper.
Wikipedia
was closely integrated from the beginning of the project, making Trove the first
GLAM
website in the world to integrate the Wikipedia API into its product.
[18]
2010s
Trove has continued to evolve and take on new services and collections. In 2016, in collaboration with the
State Library of New South Wales
, Trove launched the
Government Gazettes
zone, and continues to collect the official gazettes of all level of government (
Commonwealth
and
State and Territory
) where possible.
[19]
In March 2019 PANDORA became part of larger the
Australian Web Archive
, which comprises the PANDORA archive, the Australian Government Web Archive (AGWA) and the National Library's ".au"
domain
collections, using a single interface in Trove which is publicly available.
[20]
[21]
[22]
[23]
Content and services
Description
Trove has grown beyond its original aims, and has become "a community, a set of services, an aggregation of
metadata
, and a growing repository of full text digital resources" and "a platform on which new knowledge is being built". It is now a collaboration between the National Library, Australia's
State and Territory
libraries and hundreds of other cultural and research institutions around Australia.
[24]
It is an Australian online
library
database aggregator; a free faceted-search engine hosted by the National Library of Australia,
[25]
in partnership with content providers, including members of the National and State Libraries Australia (NSLA).
[7]
Content and delivery
Trove "brings together content from libraries, museums, archives, repositories and other research and collecting organisations big and small" in order to help users find and use resources relating to Australia and therefore the content is Australian-focused.
[24]
Much of the material may be difficult to retrieve with other search tools, for example in cases where it is part of the
deep web
, including records held in collection databases,
[7]
or in projects such as the
PANDORA web archive
, Australian Research Online, Australian National Bibliographic Database and others mentioned above.
[3]
Since 2019, Trove has included access to all
electronic documents
deposited by Australian publishers under the
legal deposit
provisions of the
Copyright Act 1968
, as amended in 2017 to included such publications.
[26]
These resources are identifiable by a display in the top right-hand corner in both the ebook and pdf viewers, saying "National edeposit collection". Many of these are readable and some are
downloadable
, depending on the access conditions.
[27]
The site's content is split into "zones" designating different forms of content which can be searched all together, or separately.
[28]
Books
The book zone allows searching of the collective catalogues of institutions findable in
Libraries Australia
using the Australian National Bibliographic Database (ANBD). It provides access to books,
audio books
,
e-books
,
theses
,
conference proceedings
and
pamphlets
listed in ANBD, which is a
union catalogue
of items held in Australian libraries and a national bibliographic database of resources including Australian online publications.
[29]
Bibliographic records from the ANBD are also uploaded into the
WorldCat
global union catalogue.
[30]
The results can be filtered by format if searching for
braille
, audio books, theses or conference proceedings and also by decade and language of publication.
[31]
A filter for Australian content is also provided.
[8]
[32]
Newspapers
Front page of
The Leader
(
Orange, New South Wales
) 31 July 1915, the 10 millionth newspaper page to be made available through Trove.
[33]
Front cover of
The Dawn
Issue 1, 15 May 1888. The first feminist magazine in Australia.
Trove allows text-searching of digitised historic newspapers, with the Newspapers zone replacing the previous "Australian Newspapers" website.
[
citation needed
]
It provides text-searchable access to over 700 historic Australian newspapers from each State and Territory.
[34]
By 2014, over 13.5 million digitised newspaper pages had been made available through Trove as part of the Australian Newspaper Plan (ANPlan),
[35]
a "collaborative program to collect and preserve every newspaper published in Australia, guaranteeing public access" to these important historical records.
[36]
The extent of
digitised newspaper archives
is wide reaching and includes now defunct publications, such as the
Australian Home Companion and Band of Hope Journal
and
The Barrier Miner
in New South Wales and
The Argus
in Victoria.
[note 1]
[37]
It includes the earliest published Australian newspaper, the
Sydney Gazette
(which dates to 1803), and some
community language
newspapers.
[35]
Also included is
The Australian Women's Weekly
.
[38]
[note 2]
The Canberra Times
is the only major newspaper available beyond 1957. It allowed publication of its in-copyright archive up to 1995 as part of the "centenary of Canberra" in 2013,
[40]
and the digitisation costs were raised with a
crowdfunding
campaign.
[41]
Also crowdfunded, the Australian feminist magazine
The Dawn
was included on
International Women's Day
2012.
[42]
[43]
As of 10 May 2020
[update]
, 23,498,368 newspaper pages and 2,026,782 government gazette pages were available to view.
- Australian Newspapers Digitisation Project
On 25 July 2008 the "Australian Newspapers Beta" service was released to the public as a standalone website and a year later became a fully integrated part of the newly launched Trove. The service contains millions of articles from 1803 onwards, with more content being added regularly.
[44]
The website was the public face of the Australian Newspapers Digitisation Project, a coordination of major libraries in Australia to convert historic newspapers to text-searchable digital files. The Australian Newspapers website allowed users to search the database of digitised newspapers from 1803 to 1954 which are now in the
public domain
.
The newspapers (frequently
microfiche
or other photographic facsimiles) were scanned and the text from the articles has been captured by
optical character recognition
(OCR) to facilitate easy searching, but it contains many OCR errors, often due to poor quality facsimiles.
[45]
[46]
- Public text correctors
Since August 2008 the system has incorporated
crowdsourced
text-correction as a major feature, allowing the public to change the searchable text. Many users have contributed tens of thousands of corrected lines, and some have contributed millions.
[47]
As of January 2022 5.82% of articles have at least one correction.
[48]
This collaborative participation allows users to give back to the service and over time improves the database's searchability.
[49]
[50]
The text-correcting community and other Trove users have been referred to as "Trovites".
[51]
Websites
The
Australian Web Archive
, created in March 2019,
[52]
includes websites archived from 1996 until the present. This is the primary search portal of the
PANDORA
web-archiving service, and also includes the
Australian Government Web Archive
(AGWA) as well as websites from the ".au"
domain
, which are collected annually through large
crawl harvests
.
[53]
Other zones
(In order of presentation along the top tab.)
- Pictures, photos, objects:
Including digitised photographs, drawings, posters, postcards etc. Considerable numbers of images on
Flickr
with the appropriate licensing are donated as well.
[54]
Replacing the previous "Pictures Australia" website.
- Journals, articles and datasets
searching of academic and other periodicals, and various datasets.
- Government Gazettes:
allows searching of official publications written for the purpose of notifying the public of government business.
- Music, sound and videos:
allows searching of digitised historic
sheet music
and audio recordings. Replacing the previous "Music Australia" website. Also includes searchable transcripts from many
Radio National
programs.
[55]
- Maps
- Diaries, letters, archives
- People and organisations:
allows searching of biographical information and other resources about associated people and organisations, from resources including the
Australian Dictionary of Biography
.
- Lists
Users are able to create an account and log in to Trove. Once this is done, a type of "zone" called
Lists
allows logged-in users to make their own public compilations of items found in Trove searches. There is also a facility to join the Trove community and make contributions to the resources such as tags, comments and corrections.
Reception and usage
In a keynote address to the 14th National
Australian Library and Information Association
(ALIA) Conference in
Melbourne
in 2014,
Roly Keating
, Chief Executive of the
British Library
described Trove as "exemplary" ? a "both-end choice" of deep rich interconnected archive.
[56]
Digital humanities
researcher and Trove manager Tim Sherratt noted that in relation to the Trove Application Programming Interface (API) "delivery of cultural heritage resources in a machine-readable form, whether through a custom API or as
Linked Open Data
, provides more than just improved access or possibilities for aggregation. It opens those resources to transformation. It empowers us to move beyond ‘discovery’ as a mode of interaction to analyse, extract, visualise and play".
[57]
The subsequent development of the GLAM Workbench
[58]
aims to utilise such machine readable data.
[59]
Since 2018 the Australian Academic and Research Network (
AARNet
) has provided a dedicated
Jupyter Notebooks environment
that enables researchers "easily explore and analyse data held in the National Library of Australia (and Cloudstor) using Jupyter Notebooks created and openly shared by Associate Professor Tim Sherratt via the ‘GLAM Workbench’."
[60]
The site has been described as "a model for collaborative digitization projects and serves to inform cultural heritage institutions building both large and small digital collections".
[61]
The reach of the newspaper archives makes the service attractive to
genealogists
[62]
[63]
[64]
and
knitters
.
[9]
It is one of the most well-respected
[65]
and accessed GLAM (galleries, libraries, archives and museums) services in Australia, with over 70,000 daily users.
[66]
[9]
Dr Liz Stainforth of the
University of Leeds
calls it "that rare beast: a digital heritage platform with popular appeal"; "of the most successful of its kind among aggregators such as
Europeana
, the
Digital Public Library of America
and...
DigitalNZ
". What distinguishes it from the other three is that it also delivers content, and engages with the general public, which has created a form of
virtual community
amongst its text correctors. Users can log in and thus create their own lists, and also correct the text of newspapers scanned using
Optical character recognition
(OCR), with an honour board for the top correctors. International researchers also use Trove: a 2018 showed the site among the top 15 for external citations in the English-language version of Wikipedia. The width and breadth of its audience adds to its uniqueness.
[67]
Awards
Trove received the 2011 Excellence in eGovernment Award and the 2011 Service Delivery Category Award.
[68]
[69]
Budget cuts
In the wake of the
Australian Government
's 2015 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook Statement, Trove funding was cut with the result that the National Library of Australia would cease "aggregating content in Trove from museums and universities unless ... fully funded to do so".
[70]
In addition, it was argued that the cuts would further "result in many smaller institutions across Australia being unable to afford to add their digital collections to this national knowledge infrastructure".
[71]
Those smaller institutions would include local historical societies, clubs, schools, and commercial and public organisations, as well as private collections.
In March 2016 ten major Australian galleries, libraries, archives and museums (commonly referred to as the
GLAM sector
) signed a statement of support for Trove, in which they warned that the budgetary cuts would "hamper the development of our world leading portal and will be a major obstacle to exposing the collections of smaller and regional institutions" and that "without additional funding, Trove will not fulfil its promise as the discovery site for all Australian cultural content".
[72]
Similar statements were issued by the
Australian Academy of the Humanities
[73]
and the
National Trust (NSW)
.
[74]
Tim Sherratt, a former manager of Trove, warned in early 2016 that fewer collections would be added and that less digitised content would be available ? "not quite a content freeze, but certainly a slowdown".
[75]
Following extensive campaigning, including a public campaign on
Twitter
, Trove received a commitment of
A$16.4
million in December 2016, spread over four years.
[67]
[76]
By early 2020, with the surge in demand for all types of digital services, the National Library was having to cope with increasingly dwindling staff resources to develop services on Trove and National edeposit, and undertook a restructure of its staffing and operations.
[77]
Continuing development
In July?August 2020 a redesigned user interface was unrolled, with a more open display of search results and a new logo reminiscent of a
keyhole
.
See also
Notes
References
- ^
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a
b
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.
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;
;
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.
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- ^
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.
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- ^
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.
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.
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.
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- ^
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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Further reading
External links