Futureatlas.com. (2010, Oct. 30). Citation Needed. Retrieved from https://www.flickr.com/photos/87913776@N00/5129607997. Used under the Creative Commons License.
The following tabs offer examples of citations according to the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th edition, 2010. Though technically one citation style, Chicago has two forms: the bibliography style and the author-date style, which is also known as the reference list style.
In her book, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Kate Turabian introduces the two styles in the following passage:
The two most common forms of citation [are] called notes-bibliography style, or simply bibliography style (used widely in the humanities and in some social sciences), and parenthetical citations-reference list style, or reference list style (used in most social sciences and in the natural and physical sciences). If you are not certain which style to use in a paper, consult your instructor (Turabian, 15.3).
In the pages that follow, you will find a tabbed structure presenting examples of citing different types of media in both the bibliography style and the author-date style.