Some definitions:
Original materials on which other research is based.
Usually the first formal appearance of results in the print or electronic literature.
Present information in its original form, neither interpreted nor condensed nor evaluated by other writers.
Are from the time period (for example, something written close to when what it is recording happened is likely to be a primary source.)
Present original thinking, report on discoveries, or share new information.
Some examples:
Scientific journal articles reporting experimental research results
Proceedings of Meetings, Conferences and Symposia.
Technical reports
Dissertations or theses (may also be secondary)
Internet communications on email, listservs, and newsgroups
In science, secondary sources are those which simplify the process of finding and evaluating the primary literature. They tend to be works which repackage, reorganize, reinterpret, summarise, index or otherwise "add value" to the new information reported in the primary literature.
Some Definitions:
Describe, interpret, analyze and evaluate the primary sources.
Comment on and discuss the evidence provided by primary sources.
Are works which are one or more steps removed from the event or information they refer to, being written after the fact with the benefit of hindsight.
Some examples:
Dictionaries and encyclopedias
Handbooks and data compilations
Journal articles, particularly in disciplines other than science (may also be primary)
Monographs (other than fiction and autobiography)
Newspaper and popular magazine articles (may also be primary)
Review articles and literature reviews
Textbooks
Primary, Secondary & Tertiary Sources
Written by Ward Saylor & Helen Hooper for Information and Research Support, within the Information Services program of the Academic Support Division at James Cook University, July, 2000.
http://cms.jcu.edu.au/libcomp/assist/guides/azguides/JCUPRD_030412
The description of Primary Sources at Yale may help to provide insight into the different possible types available for research. Please check Quinnipiac Library resources and the Web.
A primary source contains first-hand reporting of an historical event. The individual witnessed the event and records it at that time or somewhat later. When searching the online catalog try one of these keywords: autobiographies, correspondence, diaries, letters, memoirs, or personal narratives. Remember to add the research topic to the search, for example "suffrage."
Primary sources may include:
A secondary source is removed in time from the historical event and is not a first-hand report of it. It might be a commentary on the event, an analysis, research, or a review of it.
Secondary sources may include:
This article appeared in the May 2015 issue of College & Research Libraries News published by the Association of College & Research Libraries. The author, Susan Birkenseer, is reference and instruction librarian at Saint Mary’s College of California and she has identified a collection of freely available primary sources in newspapers, letters and diaries, photographs, maps, and official records.
This article appeared in the October 2015 issue of College & Research Libraries News published by the Association of College & Research Libraries. Seth Kershner is public services librarian at Northwestern Connecticut Community College and Michael Mannheim is collection development librarian at American International College. Many of the resources contain primary source materials.