eAlmanac is an online reference source dedicated to helping people find the information they are looking for quickly and easily. At the same time, eAlmanac also provides users with unexpected but related facts, figures, and stories.
eAlmanac seeks to provide the same high quality information to its users that they have come to expect from top newspapers such as The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, magazines such as The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, and Harper’s, and reference works such as The Encyclopaedia Britannica. eAlmanac’s editors and writers take the time not only to carefully research each topic, but also to think about content in unique ways. In doing this, eAlmanac offers users unexpected information about many topics, and surprising connections to other subject matter.
In addition to providing a concise and complete definition for, or explanation of, a topic, eAlmanac also identifies print and online sources where users can find additional information. eAlmanac’s editors review each Web site linked to eAlmanac in order to determine a site’s relevancy and accuracy. Editors may choose to include sites that deal with sensitive or contentious subject matter. Such sites are selected only if they have educational value, document important practices or institutions, or promote informed and constructive dialogue on topics of importance to eAlmanac users.
The World Wide Web is the product of many online publishers, including individuals, institutions, and traditional print sources. As such, eAlmanac’s editors cannot ensure the accuracy or every statement at every site. For this same reason, sites appearing as links from the eAlmanac site do not necessarily represent the beliefs of eAlmanac or its editors.
If you have any corrections to our content, please send an email to content at ealmanac.com with the topic in the subject line or use our submission form.
If you have any questions about eAlmanac’s Editorial Policy, please email us.

