On December 25, 1958, Rosenthal and Carroll founded the short-lived, but highly influential, journal Big Table.
Leeuwin, a short-lived literary journal published in Western Australia by Willem Siebenhaar in 1910.
The Natural History Review was a short-lived, quarterly journal devoted to natural history.
Locus Solus was chosen, in reference to Roussel's novel, as the name of a short-lived literary journal (1961-?)
For the following two years, Pimlott was responsible, with friends, for the short-lived journal Samizdat.
The publishing company followed a short-lived journal that he founded, of the same name.
The first issue of the short-lived journal was published in March 1796; it had ceased publication by May of that year.
The short-lived journal and individual articles were subsequently cited by other scholars.
He also launched a short-lived journal, The Pan-African, in October 1901.
In parallel, he founded and printed by hand a short-lived journal, known to researches as either Aurora or Lumea.