Digital Books
- Delta Omega Classics – important texts, which have been deemed public health classics by the national council. They are generally out of print, or not widely available in libraries
- Digital Library Bookshelf: Princeton University Digital Library – A miscellany of items digitized at the Princeton University Library but belonging to no well-defined collection. The items include books, manuscripts, reports, maps, and albums from many eras.
- First Scottish Books: National Library of Scotland – Nine of the earliest books printed in Scotland.
- Medic@: Bibliothèque interuniversitaire de Santé – Provides open access to electronic versions of the library’s rare and ancient documents, including monographs, theses, articles, periodicals, and manuscripts, a total of 122,000 items. Series include antiquity, medieval times, diseases and epidemics, history of medicine and its institutions, pharmacology, and others
- Project Gutenberg – Project Gutenberg is a free online digital library with over 49,000 works. The majority of the books are older works whose copyright has expired and are now public domain, such as Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species. The library’s science bookshelf includes works in subjects such as biology, chemistry, microbiology, and physiology. Books are primarily in English.
- Rare Book Collection: The Wood Library-Museum of Anesthesiology – digitized copies of rare historic books on anesthesiology
- Rare Book Room – More than 400 rare books on subjects such as medicine, chemistry, and botany
- Scheide Library: Fifteenth-Century Printing: Princeton University Library Digital Collection – A collection of early-European printing.
- Soviet Era Books for Children and Youth (1918-1938): Princeton University Library Digital Collection – 47 imprints produced between 1918 and 1938 presenting examples of the visual and verbal idioms artists and authors used to address the country’s children and youth in the first two decades after the October Revolution.
- The Mackie Family History of Neuroscience Collection: University of Calgary Libraries and Cultural Resources – Selected works from the collection’s nearly 2500 books and journal articles spanning over 350 years in the development of neuroscience