1970–1974 1980–1984 1990–1994 2000–2004 2010–2014 … · 2018. 11. 29. · free access to...
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1966–1969INIS established and approved by the IAEA Board of Governors in 1969
INIS Reference Series published
Adaptation of EUROATOM Thesaurus for INIS use
1970–1974First Atomindex published
First INIS Training Seminar
INIS Thesaurus developed
1975–1979100,000 non-conventional (NCL) full-texts on microfi che
Remote access to database given to INIS Centres
1980–1984INIS Thesaurus in English, French, German and Russian
1985–1989250,000 NCL full-texts on microfi che
1 million bibliographic records
1990–1994Fibre software introduced for input preparation
INIS database on CD-ROM
Email submission of input introduced
1995–1999INIS website launched
2 million bibliographic records
Internet access to the INIS database
Spanish added to the INIS Thesaurus
2000–2004Computer Assisted Indexing initiated
2.5 million bibliographic records
2005–2009Online access to full-texts
More than 3 million bibliographic records
Free access to INIS repository on the Internet
Arabic, Chinese added to the INIS Thesaurus
2010–2014INIS repository employs a new search technology
Mobile version of INIS website launched
Japanese added to the INIS Thesaurus
2015–2018E-learning modules introduced
INIS moves towards Open Access
New powerful search engine implemented
4 million bibliographic records
INISOrganizing the world’s nuclear information and making it universally accessible
iaea.org/inis International Nuclear Information System
[email protected]: (+43-1) 2600-25107Fax: (+43-1) 26007Twitter: @INISsecretariat
Contact us One of the world’s leading Open Access repositories for nuclear science and technology literature
The International Nuclear Information System (INIS) hosts one of the world’s largest collections of published information on the peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology.
INIS is a unique and valuable information resource, offering global coverage of nuclear literature.
INIS was established in 1970 in line with the IAEA’s mandate “to foster the exchange of scientifi c and technical information on peaceful uses of atomic energy”. It is operated by the IAEA in collaboration with over 150 Member States and international organizations.
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