期刊名称:EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF 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
The publication organ of the European Association of Archaeologists, the European Journal of Archaeology (published from 1993 to 1997 as the Journal of European Archaeology, vols 1-5) seeks to promote open debate amongst archaeologists committed to a new idea of Europe in which there is more communication across national frontiers and more interest in interpretation. The journal accepts not only new empirical data and new interpretations of the past but also encourages debate about the role archaeology plays in society, how it should be organized in a changing Europe, and the ethics of archaeological practice. All periods are covered; papers, review articles, interviews and short 'debate' pieces are all sought. Whilst English is the primary language of publication in the EJA, papers submitted in French or German will be given equal consideration.
Abstracting/indexing in:
Academic Search Premier
Anthropological Literature
Art Index (H. W. Wilson's)
Arts & Humanities Citation Index
British and Irish Archaeological Bibliography
CD-ROM - International Bibliography of Book Reviews of Scholarly Lterature on the Humanities and Social S
CD-ROM International Bibliography of Periodical Literature on the Humanities and Social Sciences
Current Contents/ Arts & Humanities
IBZ: International Bibliography of Periodical Literature
International Bibliography of Book Reviews of Scholarly Literature on the Humanities and Social Sciences
Old Testament Abstacts
Online - International Bibliography of Book Reviews of Scholarly Literature on the Humanities and Social
Online - International Bibliography of Periodical Literature on the Humanities and Social Sciences
Periodical Abstracts
Instructions to Authors
Submission of mss: authors should retain one copy of their manuscript and send three identical copies, each fully numbered and typed in double spacing throughout, on one side only of white A4 or US standard size paper, to the general editor, Alan Saville, Archaeology Department, National Museums of Scotland, Chambers Street
Edinburgh, EH1 1JF, Scotland
[email:a.saville@nms.ac.uk].
Covering letter: please attach to every submission a letter confirming that all authors have agreed to the submission and that the article is not currently being considered for publication by any other journal.
Format of mss: Each manuscript should contain:
(i) title page with full title and subtitle (if any). For the purposes of blind refereeing, full name of each author with current affiliation and full address/phone/fax/email details plus short biographical note should be supplied on a separate sheet. The address supplied will be used to send proofs and offprints -- if you plan to be away from your usual address during the 6 months after submitting your article, please supply alternative contact details.
(ii) abstract of 100-150 words in English, French or German. If French or German is your native tongue, please provide the abstract in that language, even if the paper is in English. The abstract comes at the start of the paper and summarizes the contents.
(iii) 5-10 key words.
(iv) main text and word count -- suggested target is about 8000 words. Text to be clearly organized, with a clear hierarchy of three levels of headings and subheadings and quotations above 40 words displayed, indented, in the text.
(v) end notes, if necessary, should be signalled by superscript numbers in the main text and listed at the end of the text before the references.
(vi) references should follow the Harvard or scientific convention. Bibliographic references in the text should contain within parentheses the author's surname or some conventional shortening of the title of the work if no immediate author or editor is listed (note that this should correspond to the bibliographic entry in the references at the end of the paper) and date of publication and page references, such as (Childe 1954:117) or (Radiocarbon Handbook 1988:iv). Multiple references should be separated with a comma, e.g. (Nadelkopf 1888, 1893) and dates should be separated from pages with a full colon (e.g. Tête d'épingle 1901:22). References should be listed alphabetically at the end of the paper with book or journal titles italicized or underlined, including place of publication and publisher, issue and page numbers. Examples:
FISHER, GENEVIEVE, 1988. Sociopolitical organization in early Anglo-Saxon England. In Mary Littlechick (ed.), England in the Old Days: 128-144. Oxford: British Archaeological Publications (British Series 329).
SILVER, M., 1985. Economic Structure of the Ancient Near East. London/Sydney: Croom Helm.
TROTTER, MILDRED and GOLDINE C. GLESER, 1952. Estimation of stature from long bones of American Whites and Negroes. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 10:463-514.
WILLIAMS, J., ed., 1997. Money: A History. London: British Museum Press.
Illustrations: all line diagrams and photographs are termed 'Figures' and should be referred to as such in the manuscript. They should be numbered consecutively. Line diagrams should be presented in a form suitable for immediate reproduction (i.e. not requiring redrawing), each on a separate A4 sheet and, if possible, on CD or diskette as TIFF or EPS files (all fonts embedded). They should be reproducible to a final printed text area of 115 mm x 185 mm. Photographs should preferably be submitted as clear, glossy, unmounted black and white prints with a good range of contrast. All figures should have short descriptive captions typed on a separate sheet.
Tables: tables should be typed (double line-spaced) on separate sheets and their position indicated by a marginal note in the text. All tables should have short descriptive captions with footnotes and their source(s) typed below the tables. AUTHORS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR OBTAINING PERMISSIONS FROM COPYRIGHT HOLDERS for reproducing through any medium of communication any illustrations, tables, figures or lengthy quotations previously published elsewhere.
Style: use a clear readable style, avoiding jargon. If technical terms or acronyms must be included, define them when first used. Use non-racist, non-sexist language and plurals rather than he/she. Capitalize sparingly. Never capitalize archaeological features, e.g. pit B and not Pit B. Capitalize magnetic directions only when part of a recognized name, such as South America, otherwise, e.g. northern England. Capitalize archaeological periods, such as Neolithic, whether as noun or adjective, but do not capitalize further refinements, such as early, late, upper, or lower, thus: upper Palaeolithic hand axe. Chemical elements should be spelt out in textual passages, but given in their abbreviated form, e.g. Au, Pb, in statistical paragraphs, tables and figures. Ratios should be presented thus: 1:10 or silver:gold.
Dates: give dates as date, month, year: e.g. 4 July 1776. Use 1960s (not sixties) without an apostrophe and spell out the number of centuries or millennia: e.g. fourth century AD or third millennium BC. Invert the order of date and AD when using specific numbers, e.g. AD 980. There are no commas in thousands of years old, but there are in tens of thousands of years old: e.g. 45M BC and 12,000 BP. Uncalibrated radiocarbon years follow ordinary conventions, dates are given in lowercase bp. When using calibrated radiocarbon dates, it should be clear which calibration is being used.
Spellings: UK or US spellings may be used but always use '-ize' spellings as given in the Oxford English Dictionary (e.g. organize, recognize).
Punctuation: use single quotation marks with double quotes inside single quotes. Do not use points in abbreviations, contractions or acronyms (e.g. AD, USA, Dr, PhD)
Disks: on acceptance of your manuscript for publication, you will be asked to supply a PC compatible diskette (MS-DOS Word 6.0 or similar) of the final version.
Proofs and offprints: Authors will receive proofs of their articles and be asked to send corrections to SAGE. They will receive a complimentary copy of the journal and controlled access to a pdf of their article after publication.
Books for review and manuscripts of reviews should be sent to:
Cornelius Holtorf, Lunds universitet, Institutionen för arkeologi och antikens historia, Box 117, 221 00 Lund, Sweden [email: Cornelius.Holtorf@ark.lu.se].
English Language Editing Services: Please click here for information on professional English language editing services recommended by SAGE.
Editorial Board
Editor:
Alan Saville National Museums of Scotland, UK
Incoming Editor:
Robin Skeates Durham University, UK
Editorial Advisory Board:
Maria Eugenia Aubet Pompeu Fabra University, Spain
Graeme Barker University of Cambridge, UK
Evzen Neustupny Katedra Archeologie, Czech Republic
Hermann Parzinger German Archaeological Institute, Berlin, Germany
Margarita Primas University of Zurich, Switzerland
Klavs Randsborg University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Stanislaw Wojciech Tabaczynski
Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Ruth Tringham University of California, Berkeley, USA
Editorial Board:
Stasa Babic University of Belgrade, Yugoslavia
Christina Marangou Greece
Marinella Pasquinucci University of Pisa, Italy
John Robb Cambridge University, UK
Ladislav Smejda University of West Bohemia, Czech Republic
Abstracts Translator:
Heiner Schwarzberg Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany
Isabelle Kayser-Gerges Luxembourge
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