International Federation of Library Associations. ISBD(M). International Standard Bibliographic Description for Monographic Puhlications. 1st standarded. London: IFLA Committee on Cataloguing , 1974, p. 1 (0.1.2.)
2.
"Chapter 6, Separately Published Monographs... Revised to Accord with the International Standard Bibliographic Description (Monographs)." Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules. North American Text. Chicago: American Library Association, 1974.
3.
ISBD(A): International Standard Bibliographic Description for Older Monographic Publications (Antiquarian). London: IFLA International Office for UBC, 1980.
4.
Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules. 2nd ed. Chicago: American Library Association, 1978.
5.
Library of Congress. Office for Descriptive Cataloguing Policy. Bibliographic Description of Rare Books: Rules Formulated Under AACR2 and ISBD(A) for the Descriptive Cataloguing of Rare Books and Other Special Printed Materials. Washington: Library of Congress, 1981.
6.
The Library of Congress has decided generally to follow the convention of modern punctuation when using BDRB, omittingorchanging the original punctuation whenever required. A few US institutions, however, have decided to retain the original punctuation in addition to using ISBD punctuation.
7.
International Conference on Cataloguing Principles (1961: Paris, France). Report. Edited by A.H. Chaplin and Dorothy Anderson. London: IFLA International Office for UBC, 1981.
8.
An earlier version of this formulation of the purpose of the rare book catalogue appeared in Belanger , T., and S.P. Davis."Rare Book Cataloguing and Computers- II."AB Bookman's Weekly , (January 14, 1980) p. 187-204.
9.
Independent Research Libraries Association. Ad Hoc Committee on Standards for Rare book Cataloguing in Machine-Readable Form. Proposals for Establishing Standards for the Cataloguing of Rare Books and Specialized Research Materials in Machine-Readable Form: Final ReportWorcester, Mass.: Independent Research Libraries Association , 1979.