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期刊名称:CAMBRIDGE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL

ISSN:0959-7743
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 32 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, USA, NY, 10013-2473
  出版社网址:http://www.cambridge.org/us/
期刊网址:http://www.cambridge.org/journals/journal_catalogue.asp?mnemonic=CAJ
主题范畴:ARCHAEOLOGY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
Aims and Scope

The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is the leading journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology. It provides a forum for innovative, descriptive and theoretical archaeological research, paying particular attention to the role and development of human intellectual abilities and symbolic beliefs and practices.

Specific topics covered in recent issues include: the use of cultural neurophenomenology for the understanding of Maya religious belief, agency and the individual, new approaches to rock art and shamanism, the significance of prehistoric monuments, ritual behaviour on Pacific Islands, and body metamorphosis in prehistoric boulder artworks. In addition to major articles and shorter notes, the Cambridge Archaeological Journal includes review features on significant recent books. The Journal has a distinguished editorial board that includes British, American and Australian scholars of international repute.


Instructions to Authors
Cambridge Archaeological Journal
The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is published three times a year in February, June and October. It covers significant archaeological research, both theoretical and descriptive. Ranging widely in space and time, it focuses particularly on the role and development of human cognitive abilities as reflected in the religion, iconography and other characteristics of early societies. The journal seeks particularly to promote debate and discussion on crucial issues such as the origins of speech and language, archaeological approaches to symbolism and art, and the evidence for early human cognition.
Submissions
All editorial correspondence and articles offered for submission should be sent to:
Dr John Robb Editor Cambridge Archaeological Journal McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research Downing Street Cambridge CB2 3ER UK
Telephone: 01223 339327 (CAJ Office) or 01223 39004 (Editor)
Fax: 01223 339337 E-mail: HTUjer39@cam.ac.ukUTH or HTUdak12@cam.ac.ukUTH
Submission of an article is taken to imply that it has not previously been published, and has not been submitted for publication elsewhere. Upon acceptance of a paper, the author will be asked to assign copyright (on certain conditions) to: The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Contributors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce any material in which they do not own copyright, to be used in both print and electronic media, and for ensuring that the appropriate acknowledgements are included in their manuscript.
Manuscript Preparation
Contributors should submit three copies of articles, typed double-spaced on one side only of A4 or equivalent paper with good margins. Articles should normally be no more than 10,000 words, but longer articles will be considered. There is also provision for shorter notes of up to 5000 words. In the case of articles (though not shorter notes) an abstract of 100 words should also be supplied.
Submission on disk (preferably 3.5) is encouraged. When submitting a disk please specify file name(s), software and type of computer. Our preference is for Apple Macintosh Microsoft Word 5.1, but most other programme are acceptable.
Contributors are urged to aim for clarity of expression with a minimum of jargon.
Text Preparation
Spelling: should follow English practice, e.g. 'colour' rather than 'color'.
Use 'z' instead of 's' in words such as 'organize', 'recognize', 'civilization', 'sympathize', 'analyze' etc.
Notes: these must be endnotes rather than footnotes. Notes are referred to in the text with a superscript number.
Numerals: Use words for one to nine, but numbers from 10 upwards, except where this produces inconsistency within a sentence or short passage; in this case, use numbers throughout.
Commas should be used in thousands only from 10,000 (e.g. 3500, 23,840).
Spell out 'per cent', reserving '%' for lists and tables.
For measurements, use metric not imperial as far as possible.
Dates:
1) 1 May 1988 (no comma)
2) the nineteenth century (noun); nineteenth-century (adj.)
3) the forties; the 1760s
4) ad and bc in small capitals (or font size 8); ad to precede and bc to follow the date separated by a space, e.g. ad 1066, 4004 bc.
Quotations:
1) Use ', ', ' and ', not ' or '.
2) Long quotations are apart in smaller type, without quotation marks. Quotations within long quotations are indicated by single inverted commas.
3) Short quotations are indicated by single inverted commas, with double inverted commas only for quotations within quotations.
4) Punctuation follows closing inverted comma, except exclamation mark and question mark belonging to the quotation, or a full stop if the quotation is or ends with a grammatically complete sentence beginning with a capital.
5) Bibliographical reference to the quotation follows the final punctuation if that punctuation belongs to the quote. The reference precedes the final punctuation mark if the mark does not belong to the quotation according to the above criteria (no. 4). e.g, (NB. Placement of full stop): ... Yet there is a sufficient diversity to rule out any simple, strongly deterministic causality. (Trigger 1989a, 402) but ... there is a sufficient diversity to rule out any causality (Trigger 1989a, 402).
Figures and Plates:
1) e.g. Figure 1. Map of site.
2) In-text references to figures and plates are abbreviated to 'Fig.' or 'Pl.', followed by a single space then the number, e.g. Fig. 3.
References
1) Use ampersands and commas where appropriate, works by the same author published in the same year should be indicated by 'a', 'b', etc. and should follow date without intervening space, e.g. Edwards 1982a; Jones 1987a,b,c.
2) Do not use Ibid., op. cit. or similar expressions.
At end:
1) Grouped in author-alphabetical order at the end of the article.
2) Upper and lower case: article titles should be in lower case, plain text; book and journal titles should have main words capitalized and be in italics.
3) Page numbers are elided as far as possible, e.g. 223-71 rather than 223-271; 453-9 rather than 453-459, except for numbers from 11 to 19, e.g. 312-17 not 312-7.
4) Page numbers are required within the reference for articles in journals and separate articles in books (see examples below).
5) States within publication location information should be in standard abbreviated form in round brackets, e.g. Albuquerque (NM): University of New Mexico Press; New York (NY): Academic Press, etc.
6) Journals do not need the place or publisher to be specified.
7) Punctuation: see examples below.
Examples:
Journal Articles Bednarik, R.G., 1996a. Eneolithic horse burial in Italy. The Artefact19, 102-3. Bednarik, R.G., 1996b. Only time will tell: a review of the methodology of direct rock art dating. Archaeometry 38(1), 1-13.
Chapter in book Frankel, D., 1991. Ceramic variability: measurement and meaning, in Cypriot Ceramics: Reading the Prehistoric Record, eds. J.A. Barlow, D. Bolger & B. Kling (University Museum Monograph 74.) Philadelphia (PA): University of Pennsylvania, University Museum, 241-52.
Book Seidler, V.J., 1994 Recovering the Self: Morality and Social Theory. London: Routledge.
Book (multiple authors/eds.) Schortman, E.M. & P.A. Urban (eds.), 1992. Resources, Power and Interregional Interaction. New York (NY): Plenum Press.
Proofs
Typographical or factual errors only may be changed at proof stage. The publisher reserves the right to charge authors for correction of non-typographical errors.
Offprints
Contributors of articles and review essays receive 25 free offprints. Contributors of review articles receive 10 free offprints. Extra copies may be purchased from the publisher if ordered at proof stage.
?McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Last updated 19PthP April 2007
Editorial Board

Editorial Board

Editor

Dr John Robb
McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Downing Street
Cambridge CB2 3ER
UK
Email jer39@cam.ac.uk

Deputy Editor

Dr Nicholas James
McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Downing Street
Cambridge CB2 3ER
UK
Email nj218@cam.ac.uk

Editorial Advisory Board

Professor Graeme Barker
University of Cambridge, UK

Dr Gina L. Barnes
Durham University, UK

Professor Bryony Coles
University of Exeter, UK

Dr Bruno David
Monash University, Australia

Professor Robert A Hinde
St John's College, Cambridge, UK

Mr Barry Kemp
University of Cambridge, UK

Professor Randall H. McGuire
Binghamton University, USA

Professor Paul Mellars
University of Cambridge, UK

Professor Steven Mithen
University of Reading, UK

Professor Ian Morris
Stanford University, USA

Professor Robert Preucel
University of Pennsylvania, USA

Professor Lord Colin Renfrew
University of Cambridge, UK

Dr Eleanor Robson
University of Cambridge, UK

Professor Thomas Wynn
University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, USA





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