Plagiarism is described in the W&L 2018-19 Catalog, and cited by the Student Executive Committee, as "the use of another's words, figures, or ideas without proper ackowledgement." The resources listed here should be considered reliable sources of advice about what constitutes plagiarism and how to avoid it.
Unfortunately, there is no universally agreed-upon "style" for documenting the use of sources in research -- no single method for formatting footnotes, bibliographies, endnotes, in-text citations, etc. Instead, there are more than a dozen, most of which are specialized for use in one or more subject areas.
The W&L University Library maintain a collection of resources on these styles:
Please note that University of Chicago style has been endorsed by the American Anthropological Association (and Professor Goluboff).
What is involved in creating an annotated bibliography? Here are some guides: Purdue University | University of Wisconsin | Hunter College
A journal article's literature review discusses the existing research on aspects of the topic. Here is an example of a scholarly journal article with a literature review, although it is not clearly labeled as such: It's Dude Time
Go to this page to use