Marianne asked me where all those references at LENR-CANR.org came from,
and whether the papers are still available.

I started with two databases. One was compiled by Ed Storms and the other
by Dieter Britz. I combined them and I removed duplicates. Over time, I
added many new papers. I explained this here:

https://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/RothwellJtallyofcol.pdf

Here is the Britz bibliography. It includes 1,447 papers from major,
peer-reviewed journals. That is the only kind Britz included:

https://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/BritzDcoldnuclea.pdf

Britz sent me scanned images of the papers, which has been very helpful.

On my computer, I use a relational database program called EndNote to
organize the papers (https://endnote.com/). I highly recommend this
program. There is a free version (https://endnote.com/product-details/basic/).
You can download all of the LENR-CANR.org records into your copy of
EndNote, here: http://www.lenr-canr.org/EndNoteExport.txt As you write a
paper, you can insert references into it very conveniently. You can program
EndNote to format the references in many different formats. I use the
default format, except that I modified it to append the link to
LENR-CANR.or when there is one. Here some references generated by EndNote,
in one of my recent papers:


. . .

2.         Hagelstein, P.L., et al. *New Physical Effects in Metal
Deuterides*. in *Eleventh International Conference on Condensed Matter
Nuclear Science*. 2004. Marseille, France
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/Hagelsteinnewphysica.pdf.

3.         Borowski, S.K., *Comparison of Fusion/Antiproton Propulsion
Systems for Interplanetary Travel*. 1996, NASA.

4.         Townes, C.H., *How the Laser Happened - Adventures of a
scientist*. 1999: Oxford University Press.

5.         Roulette, T., J. Roulette, and S. Pons. *Results of ICARUS 9
Experiments Run at IMRA Europe*. in *Sixth International Conference on Cold
Fusion, Progress in New Hydrogen Energy*. 1996. Lake Toya, Hokkaido, Japan:
New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, Tokyo
Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/RouletteTresultsofi.pdf.

6.         Gordon, F. and H.J. Whitehouse, *Lattice Energy Converter.* J.
Condensed Matter Nucl. Sci., 2022. *35*: p. 30-48
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/BiberianJPjcondensedzh.pdf#page=36.


I export the EndNote database and convert it to MySQL online, in the
library search screens. You can search for papers in various ways here:

https://lenr-canr.org/wordpress/?page_id=1081

Regarding the peer reviewed papers indexed by Britz, regrettably many are
not available at LENR-CANR.org because of copyright restrictions. They are
all listed in the database. They are all available online, but usually
behind paywalls. All of the big journal papers in physics, chemistry and
other subjects are behind paywalls. The publishers have not treated cold
fusion differently than any other subject. Here is an example:

"Double screened Coulomb barrier accounts for neutrons production in
cluster and other fusion experiments"

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/037596019290695I

I have often looked up papers to check the LENR-CANR database, for example
to confirm the spelling of an author's name. Every paper I have looked for
has been online. As you see, the sciencedirect record has the title,
abstract, authors, and a little quote sign icon called "Cite." Click on
"Cite," select "Export citation to RIS" and a small file downloads. Click
on the file and a complete reference pops right into your copy of EndNote.
That is handy.

I hesitate to mention this, but you can get copies of all these papers at a
rogue site in Russia, https://sci-hub.ru/ Just enter the title in the box
on the left side of the screen, where it says "enter your reference."

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