Follow this example from Chicago Manual of Style for internet documents:
Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority. 2003. Australian Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals Management System: A Report to Government by the APVMA – June 2003. Canberra: APVMA. http://www.apvma.gov.au/publications/reports/docs/registration_review_report_
2003.pdf.
Awiakta, Marilou. Selu: Seeking the Corn-Mother’s Wisdom. Golden, Colorado: Fulcrum Publishing, 1993.
While Marilou Awiakta’s Selu: Seeking the Corn-Mother’s Wisdom, is not entirely a scholarly work, she blends documented narrative with prose and poetry in her exquisite exploration of the Cherokee perspective on the Tellico Dam controversy. Awiakta summarizes the court and congressional battles surrounding the dam controversy and pays special attention to the numerous injustices committed against the Cherokee throughout the process. Awiakta’s work is useful not only as a source of background information on the Tellico controversy, but also because it is one of the only secondary sources written by a Cherokee about the Tellico controversy.[1]
Interview with Reed A. Davis, James “Hank” McGee, and Steve Payne, August 19th, 2005, Lotterdale Cove Campground, Greenback, TN.
Reed Davis and Hank McGee both grew up on land that was inundated by the Tellico Dam. McGee was also the principal of the Greenback School a public k-12 school that hosted several public opinion hearings regarding the Tellico Project. Steve Payne manages the Lotterdale Cove Campground, and was subjected to numerous threats during the years following the closure of the dam because of his perceived affiliation with TVA. This interview is an invaluable glimpse into the attitudes of those most directly affected by the Tellico Project, as well as its long-term effect on the communities, churches, and schools within the Tellico area.[2]
Plater, Zygmunt J. B. “The Legacy of the Snail Darter, a Small Fish in a Pork Barrel.” Environmental Law 34 (2004): 289-323.
Plater examines how the Tellico controversy affected the Endangered Species Act in his essay “The Legacy of the Snail Darter, a Small Fish in a Pork Barrel.” Plater discusses the uniqueness of the ESA, the political context in which it was developed, its first test with the Tellico Dam controversy, and how it has changed over the thirty years since its inception. While the snail darter issue will not be dealt with in this research paper, Plater’s discussion of the political climate that led to the passage of the ESA may prove useful in discussing early environmental opposition to the Tellico Dam.[3]
[1] Marilou Awiakta, Selu: Seeking the Corn Mother’s Wisdom (Golden, CO: Fulcrum Publishing, 1993), 21.
[2] Interview with Reed A. Davis, James “Hank” McGee, and Steve Payne, August 19th, 2005, Lotterdale Cove Campground, Greenback, TN.
[3] Zygmunt J. B. Plater, “The Legacy of the Snail Darter, a Small Fish in a Pork Barrel” Environmental Law 34 (2004): 289-291.


