1. 1 Purpose and Scope of unimarc 7 2 Format Maintenance 7



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CONTENTS


1 Introduction 7

1.1 Purpose and Scope of UNIMARC 7

1.2 Format Maintenance 7

1.3 Definitions 7

1.4 Superseded documentation 9
2. Organization of the Manual 10

2.1 General Organization 10

2.2 Notation Conventions 11
3 Format Structure 12

3.1 General Structure 12

3.2 Record Label 12

3.3 Directory 12

3.4 Variable Fields 13

3.5 Mandatory Fields 13

3.6 Length of Records 14

3.7 Record Linking 14

3.8 Character Sets 15

3.9 Repetition of data 15

3.10 Numerical Subfields 16

3.11 Treatment of Different Scripts 16

3.12 Copy Specific Data 16

3.13 Interfield Linking Data 16


4 Record Label and Data Fields — General Introduction 20

4.1 Repetition of Fields and Subfields 20

4.2 Order of Fields 20

4.3 Order of Subfields 20

4.4 Characters 21

4.5 Characters for Use in Cases of Ambiguity 21

4.6 Non-Filing Control Functions 22

4.7 Form and Content of Data 22

4.8 Punctuation 23

4.9 National and Local Use 23


Record Label and Data Fields – Field Description 24
Record Label 29
Data Fields 36

APPENDIXES 589

Appendix A: Language Codes 589

Appendix B: Country Codes 597

Appendix C: Relator Codes 600

Appendix D: Geographic Area Codes 613

Appendix E: Time Period Code 709

Appendix F: Cartographic Materials Codes 712

Appendix G: Subject Systems Codes 713

Appendix H: Cataloguing Rules and Formats Codes 716

Appendix I: Table of Values 721

Appendix J: Character Sets 729

Appendix K: Documentation to Accompany Exchange Records 738

Appendix L: Complete Examples 740

Appendix M: Bibliography 755

Appendix N: Useful Addresses 758

Appendix O: Format Changes 759

1   Introduction

1.1 Purpose and Scope of UNIMARC


The primary purpose of UNIMARC is to facilitate the international exchange of bibliographic data in machine-readable form between national bibliographic agencies. UNIMARC may also be used as a model for the development of new machine-readable bibliographic formats.

The scope of UNIMARC is to specify the content designators (tags, indicators and subfield codes) to be assigned to bibliographic records in machine-readable form and to specify the logical and physical format of the records. It covers monographs, continuing resources, cartographic materials, music, sound recordings, graphics, projected and video materials, rare books and archival materials and electronic resources.

UNIMARC is intended to be a carrier format for exchange purposes. It does not stipulate the form, content, or record structure of the data within individual systems. UNIMARC does provide recommendations on the form and content of data when it is to be exchanged. Records are usually structured in exchange tape format as the last stage in any conversion process, after form, content, and content designation have been converted to the UNIMARC standard. Those organizations intending to use UNIMARC for data interchange will find it useful to co-ordinate their internal format content designators and field and subfield definitions with those in UNIMARC to reduce the complexity of data conversion when the records are converted into the UNIMARC exchange tape structure.

References are made where applicable to other UNIMARC formats, e.g. UNIMARC/Autho­ri­ties; but no details are given. For that, users of the bibliographic format are referred to the documentation for those formats.



This Manual is both a definitive statement of the bibliographic format and a guide to its use.

1.2 Format Maintenance


UNIMARC is maintained by an IFLA committee, the Permanent UNIMARC Committee (PUC), for which the secretariat is the IFLA UNIMARC Core Activity. Future changes to the format will be primarily defining additional fields, subfields and coded values where needed. Proposals for change usually originate with those creating UNIMARC records or those using UNIMARC records. Changes are made only through the Permanent UNIMARC Committee. UNIMARC will not be modified to accommodate non-ISBD descriptive cataloguing practices or other practices contrary to the international standards on which it is based.

1.3 Definitions


The terms defined below are those used in a special sense in this Manual; terms used in their usual bibliographic sense are not defined. Definitions of ISBD data elements can be found in the ISBD documents.

Access Point – A name, term, code, etc. that is specially intended for searching for and retriev­ing a bibliographic record.

Content Designator – Codes identifying data elements and/or providing additional information about a data element. Content designators consist of tags, indicators and subfield identifiers.

Data Element – The smallest unit of information that is explicitly identified. Within a variable field, a data element is identified by a subfield identifier and it forms a subfield. Within the record label, directory, and fixed-length subfields, the data elements consisting of codes are identified by their character positions.

Data Element IdentifierSee Subfield Identifier.

End of Record Mark – A control character used at the end of each record to separate it from the next. Also known as the Record Terminator.

Field – A defined character string, identified by a tag, which contains one or more subfields.

Field Separator – A control character used at the end of each variable field to separate it from the next, and also used at the end of the directory.

Fill Character – A character used in specified character positions to indicate that no data is available to supply the appropriate value in that position, although that character position is applicable. For details of its use see Section 4, 4.5.

Fixed Length Subfield – A subfield whose length is invariant, being determined for all occurrences by provision of this format. A fixed-length subfield may be defined to contain one or more data elements. Fixed-length subfields may occur in both fixed fields, e.g. field 100, subfield $a, and in variable fields, e.g. field 200, subfield $z.

Former Titles – All titles of continuing resources earlier than the one by which the resource is currently known.

Hierarchical Level – A value assigned to the primary bibliographic entity (i.e. the item described in the 200 field) in a logical record which indicates the placement of that entity in a predefined hierarchical structure (see Hierarchical Level codes in the Record Label). For example the bibliographic description of the individual volumes of a multi volume set and the bibliographic description of the multi volume set itself, could be considered at two different hierarchical levels related to each other in that one is a component of the other. Hierarchical levels are used only when bibliographic records have been produced for entire bibliographic entitles as well as for bibliographically distinct portions of the entire entity, e.g. articles in a journal, chapters of a monograph, sub series of a series, and monographs in a series.

Indicator – A character (numeric or alphabetic) associated with a variable field which supplies additional information about the contents of the field, about the relationship between the field and other fields in the record, or about the action required in certain data manipulation processes.

ISBD Data Elements – Those data elements in the description which should be formulated according to the provisions of the International Standard Bibliographic Descriptions.

Preceding Title – For continuing resources which have changed titles, the title immediately preceding the title being catalogued.

Record Terminator – A control character used at the end of each record to separate it from the next, also known as the End of Record Mark.

Source Format – The data format in which a machine-readable record already existed before being converted into UNIMARC.

Subfield – A defined unit of information within a field (see also Data Element).

Subfield Identifier – A code consisting of two characters identifying individual subfields within a variable field. The first character, the delimiter, is always the same unique character specified in ISO 2709 and the second character, the subfield code, is either numeric or alphabetic.

Tag – A series of three numeric characters used as a label of its associated fields.

Textual Data – Data which is intended to be displayed in a catalogue entry as opposed to coded data.

Variable Field – A field in which the length may vary from one occurrence to the next. A variable field may contain one or more data elements or subfields. The length of the fields in characters includes the number of characters required for the textual data, indicators, subfield identifiers and the field separator.

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