Hi there.
In the last couple of years, I went on several mod downloading sprees for Morrowind. Like probably everyone else, I noticed that hunting down mods gets increasingly difficult because of vanishing sites and outdated lists and links. Therefore I thought it might be worthwile to pool the community knowledge about how to track down mods that are really hard to find. There already is
a very good guide by Ronin about getting mods in general, but specific information about the procedures I'm thinking about isn't included there (and may be out of scope for what it wants to achieve). So here's a start at a specific mod hunting guide (and it's really just a quick'n'dirty rundown, as I have little time. There will be lots of mistakes in it as a type that at work, while serving about 100 customers, so I can't concentrate too well. But I thought it might be worthwile to make a start).
Feel free to correct me, add to the guide, copy it, or use it in any other way that helps the community. Currently, this is just a draft, and I probably don't have the time for regular checks and updates, so the guide will need other people's help to take off -
if it's a good idea anyways.

1. What is this?
The Morrowind Mod Hunter's Guide tries to help you to track down mods that are hard to find. Morrowind is more than five years old, which means that many Morrowind-related sites have opened ... and closed. For those people that are new to the game, or revive their interest in it, this unfortunately means that many searches for mods lead to broken links and closed-down sites. In these cases, this guide tries to list a couple of sites and procedures that may help you finding the mod you're after.
This guide is meant for Morrowind newbies as well as for veterans. As such, the veterans will probably know most of the information contained here, but perhaps they'll still find some useful tips, or at least a comprehensive list of useful links.
2. How to track down a mod
2.1 Search Engines
If you know the name of the mod you're looking for, or the name of its creator, or some of its features that would have been mentioned in a description of the mod, then a very good place to start looking is Yacoby's
Elder Scrolls Search, a search engine specifically developed for Elder Scrolls mods. It indexes the three major Morrowind modding sites listed further below, plus many smaller sites which host mods not found on these.
If that doesn't help, try various combinatons of these terms in a search engine like
Google or
Yahoo.
If you are looking for a site that Google or Yahoo never visited, you can try a metasearch engine. These are search engines that relay your search to a number of other search engines and collect the results. Good metasearchers are (for example)
Clusty or
Dogpile.
2.2 Morrowind Mod sites
Currently there are three "big" mod sites for Morrowind. Each of these sites has a well-tended searchable database of 1000 - 4000 mods, so it's usually more efficient to look there before checking the smaller sites.
Planet Elder Scrolls:
Mod List /
Search pageElricM:
Mod directory and search pageTESNexus:
Mod directory /
Search page (remember to switch from the "All Oblivion files" category to a "Morrowind" category)
There are also a couple of other sites who have collected several hundred mods each. Sometimes these sites aren't as well-tended as the first tier sites. Still, they are worth a look if the first-tier sites don't have the mod you are looking for:
Fileplanet:
Mod listFilefront Morrowind:
Mod directoryFilefront Elderscrolls:
Mod directory(Note: The Fileplanet archive is not the same as the "Planet Elder Scrolls" archive, although PES stores its files on Fileplanet. Likewise, the two archives on Filefront are not the same. Don't ask me why. It seems illogical, but then again, assuming that the universe always works logical isn't a very helpful attitude anyways if you're looking for files that are hard to find.)
Another resource that's worthwile to check are the larger international Morrowind sites. Some of these have archives of English mods too:
Wiwiland (French) (currently restructuring its site, mods may not be available)
Morrowind Outlander (Italian)Morrowind.pl (Polish)Morrowind at Bonusweb.cz (Czech)www.elderscrolls.hu (Hungarian)2.3 Morrowind link lists
For a mod hunter, following link lists is often less efficient then using a web search or checking major download sites. However, that doesn't mean that they can't still be immensely helpful. One great resource are thematic mod lists, because these can greatly help refreshing one's memory when you don't remember the mod you're looking for very well. Another good use of link lists is that they provide the web adresses of sites that have vanished - and with this information, you can sometimes retrieve these sites with the Wayback machine (see 2.4)
Morrowind Mythic mods is the home of
Telesphoros' List o' mods, the
Empirical Morrowind modlist, and dozens of
Specialty and Themes modlists. All these lists have download links. For a mod hunter, they are especially great when (for example) you know that you are looking for one of the lesser known dungeon crawl mods, but don't know the name of the mod or the author. In this case, a mod list that specializes in dungeon crawls can be a great help to download (or at least remember) the mod you're looking for.
General link lists can be found here:
Morrowind ConnectMystara's Links RestoredSlartibartfast's Morrowind Links2.4 The Wayback machine
The
Wayback machine is a search engine that allows you to retrieve sites that have already vanished or changed. If you know the address of any vanished webpage, you can enter it into the Wayback machine, which will then display the dates of the versions of this page that it has stored. You can then check these stored pages, which may hold information that helps you in your search. Sometimes, even whole mods are stored in the archives. This is, for example, the case for Qwerty's mods, which
can still be downloaded via the Wayback machine.
Note: In some cases, the file in the wayback machine will be corrupt and won't extract. In case of zip or rar files, you can open them in WinRar and use its "Repair Archive" function. This will make the archive extractable. A thorough test whether the extracted files actually work is advised.
3. Problems and tips
3.1 The webpage where I hoped to find the mod complains that it cannot find the folder I specified
- Look at the web address and delete the last characters up to the next "/". Then try again, and repeat. Sometimes there is still content on the page, but its internal structure has changed, and the specific link you wanted to go to doesn't exist anymore.
3.2 The webpage looks empty
- view the source code of the site to see if it's really empty. Perhaps it's just incompatible to your browser.
3.3 The webpage is gone
- Try to enter the address in the Wayback machine
3.4 I keep getting links to websites called "Thelys" or "Euro-Morrowind"
- These sites have closed down (or, in case of Thelys, shrunk). Most mods that were on Thelys can now be found at ElricM (see above). The mods that were on Euro-Morrowind were accesible from www.morrowind-mods.org for a while, but currently this site is down too.
(This section should obviously be expanded ...)
4. Ask the community
If a mod has really vanished from the net, there's a helpful community of Morrowind players to help you out. Perhaps one of us has the file you're looking for somewhere in his or her collection.
If your own attempts to hunt down a mod remain unsuccessful, ask other Morrowind players in
Bethesda's official forums, or at the
Planet Elder Scrolls Forums, or one of the other download sites. And even if you didn' succeed on your own, the effort you already put in your search will make it easier for other people to help you. When you have already searched for a mod, you've probably come across some information about it, like the name of the mod, the name of the author, the site where it was stored, the filename it had, etc. This is very useful information.
Just imagine a request like "I'm looking for the mod 'Iredior conspiracies' by people named Switch, Gorgareth, Theta and others. The website is gone, but can be retrieved
from the Wayback machine. The filename was iredior_conspiracies.zip"
Now imagine the following request for the same mod: "I'm looking for a mod that added a huge city near Hla Oad, with lots of original artwork. Can you help pleeeeeease?"
Obviously, the more info you can give us, the easier it will be to help you.

A last note: If you managed to track down a mod that has nearly vanished from the web, please take a minute and write the author a mail, asking whether he allows the mod to be uploaded on one of the big Morrowind modding sites. This way the mod may be saved from falling off the web, and if you spent 15 minutes to locate a mod, then investing two minutes more two make the search easier for future Morrowind players doesn't hurt much, does it?

Edits:
02/18/08 - added Hungarian site, added info about repairing corrupted archives from Wayback
08/04/07 - added Czech site, added info about Wiwiland restructuring, some spelling errors corrected
11/17/07 - updated TESSource related information to mention (and link to) TESNexus instead, fixed another typo
09/28/08 - added Yacoby's Elder Scrolls Search Engine