Dalton, C. "The Great Barrier Reef," Discovery. June 2003: 32-38.
depends what magazine and what type of article you would have to talk to the magazine company
you could find it in a comparing and contrasting article
The answer is Yes and it is Time Magazine. I would prefer being left Anonymous.
The fastest way would be to use the index in the set of encyclopedias or the bibliography at the end of the article.
A periodical article that includes an abstract, bibliography, and footnotes would most likely be found in an academic journal or a scholarly publication. These features are common in academic literature to provide a summary of the article, list of references cited, and additional notes or explanations.
Quotation Marks, it is short work, like a poem, not a book or long story.
The cited source that is most likely a magazine article would typically include the name of a magazine, a specific issue and/or volume number, and page numbers. It may also have a more informal tone compared to academic journals or books.
The readers guide to periodical literature
An article for a magazine that is meant to tell people about how products are sold to different countries
Adult Teen Fashion Celebrity Sports Cooking
magazine article on the 75th anniversary of the poem, ''In Flanders Fields''
Check out Time Magazine article; it would appear to be "Oklahoma" (list is at the end of the article)