b'Webwaves WebwavesAs with any legacy dataset, there are(Volumes1-35) have been reproduced some eccentricities. Figure 1 shows theas they were. The oldest vintage of Exploration Geophysics digital library for theExploration Geophysics originate from years 1992 - 1995. At this time, Explorationscanned copies, while the newer volumes Geophysics was published in four issuesare digital versions. All volumes have been per volume. Where these extended overconcatenated with the cover material, the multiple issues they have been placedancillary material, then the journal articles. in the location of the lowest numberedAs with the CD copies, this means that issue, leaving a blank afterwards. Forthere may be some pages out of order, with example in 1995, Vol 26, No2/3 presentedthe ancillary material containing content the conference papers from the 11th ASEGfrom before and after the published papers.Geophysical Conference and ExhibitionThis library has been compiled through Ian Jamesand has been placed in the issue 2 column,considerable personal effort and any ASEG Webmaster leaving a gap for issue 3. mistakes therein are entirely my own. webmaster@aseg.org.au The historical Exploration GeophysicsPlease email webmaster@aseg.org.au if files that came from a set of CDsyou spot any problems.Exploration Geophysics on the ASEG websiteIn Webwaves in December 2020, I mentioned the Preview Digital Library (https://www.aseg.org.au/publications/preview-digital-library). This library makes all back issues of Preview available on one easy to navigate page on the ASEG website. Today I am happy to announce that, after many hours of effort, all back issues of Exploration Geophysics and The ASEG Bulletin are now also available on the website, via the following Members only webpage (https://www.aseg.org.au/publications/publications-members-only).Alongside manual cataloguing, command line utilities in Ubuntu were used to prepare the documents for the website. These included the PDF Toolkit (pdftk) and ghostscript (gs). The following operations were required, run using batch scripts wherever possible:Collecting historic files from archives, CDs, CSIRO Publishing and Taylor & FrancisRemoving the first page of articles downloaded from Taylor & Francis containing article statistics and informationCleaning data, removing duplicates and checking data integrityRenaming PDFs to ensure that articles are concatenated in the correct orderConcatenating PDFs into a single file per volume/issueExtracting the front page from each PDF and converting it into a jpg file for display on the websiteUploading all filesCreating the digital library Figure 1.Exploration Geophysics digital bookshelf.APRIL 2022 PREVIEW 38'