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期刊名称:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NAUTICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

ISSN:1057-2414
出版频率:Semi-annual
出版社:TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, England, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/
期刊网址:http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/IJNA
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

The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology covers all aspects of nautical archaeological research. The journal's themes are seas, ships, cargos, and the sailors of the past-subjects that have excited interest throughout history. The journal keeps readers abreast of the latest explorations, discoveries, and technical innovations in the field. Studies about ancient ships, harbours, and cargoes, whether from excavations or documentary sources, will be of interest to the naval architect, historian, and archaeologist. Information on the well-preserved artifacts discovered through techniques of underwater archaeology is especially valuable since these materials are seldom, if ever, found in excavations on land.

Aims and Scope

The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology is a forum for the exchange of ideas and research relevant to all aspects of nautical and maritime archaeology. Published twice a year in print and online, each issue of 224 pages contains peer-reviewed original articles, notes and book reviews.

IJNA addresses the theory and practice of archaeology and related academic disciplines which investigate human associations with water and waterborne craft of all periods throughout the world, on seas and inland waters. Aiming to encourage a fuller understanding of the maritime past within its wider context, IJNA keeps readers abreast of the latest discoveries, new interpretations and theoretical approaches.

Topics include:

  • Archaeological and ethnographic evidence for ships and boats
  • Shipwreck investigation and interpretation
  • Harbours and coastal activities
  • Seafaring and trade
  • Navigation
  • Naval warfare
  • Maritime cultural material
  • Innovative research approaches

Instructions to Authors

Author Guidelines

All material submitted is subject to peer review.

Contributions should fall into one of the following categories:

Main articles: excavation or survey reports of substance, or original discussions of issues relating to nautical archaeology. Previously unpublished, or the first publication in English, such articles should be appropriately illustrated and not exceed 12,000 words.
Shorter articles, reports and technical notes: 500 to 5,000 words with illustrations, outlining or discussing discoveries, problems, or work in progress, and thus not necessarily definitive.
International news: summaries of discoveries and current work, with illustrations if possible; notes and queries; letters to the Editor: 500 words or fewer, drawing attention to unusual phenomena, seeking advice, or relaying experience.

Book reviews are commissioned. Any enquiries or suggestions, correspondence, or books for review, should be addressed to the Reviews Editor:

Angela Croome
Flat 2
14 The Paragon
Blackheath
London SE3 0PA
UK.

Electronic submission
Text may be submitted electronically, as an e-mail attachment, preferably in .rtf format, to
paula@arnydie.demon.co.uk. There is no need to follow this up with hard copy. Digital illustrations, however, will need to be posted on a CD, because of their size. Photos should be .tif files, at least 300 dpi, and at least as big as you would like them reproduced. Line art should be sent in .eps format if possible (failing that .tif), scanned at at least 800 dpi.

Postal submission
Manuscripts for publication should be addressed to:

The Editor, IJNA
Arnydie
Peat Inn
Cupar
Fife KY15 5LF
UK.

Two copies of the text should be submitted, and also, if possible, a labelled disk containing files saved as Microsoft Word or .rtf (rich text format). Illustrations should be sent at the same time, one complete set prepared to publication standard, and a second set which can be of lower quality (this set is to send to the peer reviewer, and can be marked with any instructions, such as area to be cropped). The illustrations alone of accepted or rejected manuscripts will be returned. All manuscripts are acknowledged; please allow 2-3 weeks for this.

Article preparation
Care in preparation will help to optimise processing times. Word-processed files should be 1.5-line spaced with 2.5 cm margins, with each page numbered. Sub-headings must be on separate lines, full left, in bold (not capitals), and should not exceed one column line in length (8 cm). Do not justify the text, and on no account use automatic footnoting or endnoting. The minimum of formatting helps avoid problems when material is transferred to different software. Text may be submitted as an e-mail attachment, preferably in .rtf format. If saving in .rtf does not reduce your file in size, this means you have unnecessary formatting in it. Continue saving it until it reduces in size.

The document should be structured as follows:

Cover Sheet, or covering letter or e-mail, to include the telephone number, fax, and address and/or e-mail address of the author to whom correspondence and proofs should be sent.

  • Title Page, to include the title of the article; the name and address of each author (normally their institutional address); a Summary of not more than 100 words; and up to six Key Words.
  • Text.
  • Acknowledgements: should be brief, not exceeding 100 words.
  • Notes: please do not use automatic footnoting or endnoting. Simply put numbers in brackets or superscript where appropriate, and list the associated text at the end on a separate sheet. Notes are for manuscript references which are too complex to be included in the text, or material which would interrupt the flow of the main text, but is still relevant. Footnotes should not include any material which is bibliographical, or could be put in the acknowledgements (unless a single footnote could serve in the place of acknowledgements).
  • Bibliography: should be on a separate sheet, including page numbers of chapters or articles, following these examples. Careful adherence to these conventions saves much editorial time.
    Monographs
    Dunand, M., 1954, Fouilles de Byblos II 1933-1938. Paris.
    Ellis, R. H. and Doe, J., 1924 (reprinted 1997), A Short Account of the Lacadive Islands and Minicoy. Madras.
    Collections of essays, or conference proceedings
    Haldane, C., 1991, Recovery and analysis of plant remains from some Mediterranean shipwreck sites, in J. M. Renfrew (ed.), New Light on Early Farming. Recent Developments in Palaeobotany, 213-233. Edinburgh.
    Articles in journals
    Haldane, C., 1993, Direct evidence for organic cargoes in the Late Bronze Age, World Archaeology 24: 348-60.
    Websites
    Web references, because of their ephemeral nature, should only be used as a last resort. Normally-published references are preferable. List author, short title (or descriptive explanation) (treated like a journal article title), full URL, and latest date updated.
     Only list works cited in the text, and which could be consulted by the reader (published, or unpublished but accessible, as for example a thesis lodged in a university library, or an archaeological report lodged with the relevant archive). A book 'in prep.' means that a contract has been signed with a publisher (who should be named), and 'forthcoming' that the work is in the process of publication. Anything else, from a conference paper heard to an informal discussion, and including inaccessible unpublished written material, should be referred to as 'pers. comm.'. The guiding rule is to ensure that readers, possibly years in the future, will be able to access the reference themselves using the information you have provided.

References in the text should be cited according to the name-and-date system, as Bass (1967) or (Bass, 1967) [where the whole work is being referred to], or (Bass, 1967: 24, fig. 7) [more specific references]. Do not use idem or ibid (though passim can be used). For two authors include both names (Trott and Tomalin, 2003). For more than two authors use et al. (Bass et al., 1967) in the text, but list all names in the bibliography at the end. If you refer to several works, list them chronologically, but works of the same date alphabetically (Bass, 1967; Jones, 1976; Brown, 1991; Green, 1991; Blue, 2002). Where more than one work by the same author is cited for a particular year, use 1998a, 1998b, etc. Where two or more works cited are by the same author, repeat the name (Martin, 1997; Martin, 2000).

Numerals: spell out up to and including ten, except for numerals preceding units of measurement, or descriptions with hyphens, such as '3-pounder, 3rd-rate, 5th century'. Above ten use numbers except at the beginning of a sentence. Insert comma(s) in numbers of five figures or more, for example 5000 but 55,000. 

Measurements should normally be metric, with imperial equivalents in parentheses if appropriate. If the subject of discussion was clearly constructed using imperial measurements, these may come first, but metric measurements must be included as well. Avoid spurious accuracy when converting figures which are themselves imprecise. For example, 'about 20 feet (6 m)' not 'about 20 feet (6.096 m)'. Do not use subdivisions of a centimetre: '25 mm' not '2.5 cm'.
% not 'per cent'. Equations should use maths Roman.
 In discussion of navigational topics distances should be given in nautical miles, speeds in knots and depths in metres. Wind speeds should be given in terms of the Beaufort scale with the range in knots shown in brackets; or alternatively in knots alone.

Dates. Day-month-year, for example 15 December 1980.
19th century not nineteenth century (19th-century when used adjectivally)
BC and AD are our preferred usage, but if the writer feels strongly BCE and CE can be accepted.
BC is written after the date, AD can be written before or after (but be consistent).

Quotations. Use single quotation marks. Long quoted paragraphs (more than four lines) should be indented without quotation marks.

Spelling. Follow the Oxford English Dictionary, specifically the Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors (-ize when optional). The IJNA Style Sheet can be sent on request.

Abbreviations are generally to be avoided in the main text: 'for example' and not 'e.g.'; 'approximately' not 'approx.'.
 But - 'circa' to be abbreviated to 'c.', and pers. comm. is allowed in references (pers. comm.  John Smith).
Full stops should be used when a word is shortened, for example B. G. Smith, unless the last letter is included. for example 'ed.', but 'eds' (use 'edn' for 'edition'), 'vol.' (volume), but 'vols'.
 But - b&w (black-and-white), in (inches), m (metres), mm (millimetres), kg (kilograms), km  (kilometres), HMS, nd (no date), PEG (polyethyleneglycol), PO (Post Office) Box, UK, USA.
Do not abbreviate hours, litres, or seconds.
Use 'Fig.' for figures in the text, but 'fig.' when referring to figures in other authors' works, similarly 'No.' and 'no.'.
'&' should only be used in business designations (Adam & Co.). Otherwise write 'and'.
Acronyms should be spelled out on first mention, with the acronym in brackets immediately after it. From then on the acronym can be used on its own.

Italics should be used only for names of ships, and titles of books and journals. If using a typewriter, use underlining to indicate italics, for example HMS Invincible or HMS Invincible. Italicise foreign words (complete with any accents) unless they have been assimilated into English, in which case do not use italics or accents, and use English plural (e.g. amphoras).

Be consistent with punctuation and only insert a single space between words, numerical values and units, and after punctuation.

Articles should be written as flowing text, avoiding slang words or jargon. Subheadings should not be used excessively, and should not include numbers or letters such as (a). Bullet points should be avoided, as should joining two words with a / as in 'and/or'.

Illustrations. This is an archaeological journal, and the Editor expects that, wherever appropriate, archaeological drawings, such as site plans or finds illustrations, will be provided. Illustrations should be of as high a quality as possible, and as large or larger than you wish them reproduced. All illustrations, whether drawings or photographs, should be numbered in one series in their order of mention in the text, and referred to at the appropriate place in the text, as (Fig. 1), (Figs 2-4). Tables should be separately numbered, and presented in a separate electronic file. Hard-copy illustrations should be numbered in soft pencil or on a sticky label on the reverse, with an arrow to indicate the top. Do not use paperclips or write directly on the artwork. Digital images may be submitted on CD, saved as .tif or .eps (CMYK if colour). Photographs should be scanned at 300 dpi, line art at at least 800 dpi greyscale. Line art produced in digital packages and exported to .eps will result in the crispest quality in the electronic version of the journal. If submitting digitised plans, please ensure that any captions will be readable at the size the image will be reproduced. It is usually better to submit separate captions to avoid problems.
Line illustrations: maps and plans should be clean, sharp copies and must include metric scales. If lettering is added, it must be done with the published reduction in mind. Alternatively, the desired lettering can be indicated on a photocopy and added by the Editor or the Publisher.
Scale drawings of objects should normally follow archaeological conventions and be of 1:1,1:2, 1:4, 1:10 in scale when reduced for publication.
Photographs: glossy prints, transparencies or high-quality digital images. Metric scales to be included where practicable.
Column width is 8 cm, page width is 17 cm, landscape page width is 23 cm. Authors are encouraged to make effective use of this format in specifying the aspect ratio and suggesting the final size of their illustrations.
Please do not embed images within a Word file.

Captions should be listed on a separate sheet with scale divisions mentioned. Authors must obtain any necessary permission to reproduce illustrations before submitting the manuscript. Each figure must have the artist or photographer or source noted at the end of the caption, using any wording specified by the copyright holder (for example, 'reproduced by kind permission of the duke of Plazatoro).

It is IJNA policy not to include logos in either headings or illustrations.

Pre-submission English-language editing
Authors for whom English is a second language may choose to have their manuscript professionally edited before submission to improve the English. A list of independent suppliers of editing services can be found at
www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/english_language.asp. All services are paid for and arranged by the author, and use of one of these services does not guarantee acceptance or preference for publication.

Proofs. The publisher will send an e-mail to the principal author, inviting him/her to download proofs from the website. Those who do not have e-mail can ask to have proofs posted. Proofs should be corrected and returned to the Editor by the deadline given. The production process will not wait if they are not returned on time.

Offprints. The Publisher will supply 20 offprints of each article. Further offprints in multiples of 100 may be ordered at cost. Contributors of notes, conference reports, reviews and other short contributions will receive a PDF offprint of their contribution. Reviewers without email can request one printed offprint from the editor. Article authors can request a PDF offprint when they return their corrections.

Exclusive Licence Form.  Authors will be required to sign an Exclusive Licence Form (ELF) for all papers accepted for publication. Signature of the ELF is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless a signed form has been received. Please note that signature of the Exclusive Licence Form does not affect ownership of copyright in the material.  (Government employees need to complete the Author Warranty sections, although copyright  in such cases does not need to  be assigned).  After submission authors will retain the right to publish their paper in various media/circumstances (please see the form for further details).  To assist authors an appropriate form will be supplied by the editorial office. Alternatively, authors may like to download a copy of the form 
here.

You may download an Exclusive Licence Form for Book Reviews here.

OnlineEarly. IJNA is covered by Blackwell Publishing's OnlineEarly service. OnlineEarly articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather than having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. OnlineEarly articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and the authors' final corrections have been incorporated. Because they are in final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of OnlineEarly articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so OnlineEarly articles cannot be cited in the traditional way. They are therefore given a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which allows the article to be cited and tracked before it is allocated to an issue. After print publication, the DOI remains valid and can continue to be used to cite and access the article.

NEW: Online production tracking is now available for your article through Blackwell's Author Services.
Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Authors can check the status of their articles online and choose to receive automated e-mails at key stages of production. The author will receive an e-mail with a unique link that enables them to register and have their article automatically added to the system. Please ensure that a complete e-mail address is provided when submitting the manuscript. Visit
www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor for more details on online production tracking and for a wealth of resources including FAQs and tips on article preparation, submission and more.

Book Reviews

Headers should be laid out as follows:

Excavations at Caldicot, Gwent: Bronze Age

palaeochannels in the Lower Nedern Valley

(CBA Research Report 105)

NIGEL NAYLING and A. CASELDINE (eds)

177 pp., 79 figures

Council for British Archaeology, York YO1 2UA,
UK
, 2000, ?2, ISBN 1-872414-79-6

Our standard abbreviations in review headers are b&w, hbk (hardback), sbk (soft- or paperback), npg (no price given). Currencies. Use appropriate sign (sterling; $ = US dollar; A$ = Australian dollar; € = euro) before the number.

Abbreviations within the text of the review include Ch. + numeral [referring to chapters]; p. + numeral [references to individual pages].

Reviewers are also asked to sign forms assigning copyright to the Nautical Archaeology Society. Forms will be sent out with the book, and should be returned with the review to the Reviews Editor. As part of the copyright exercise, we now ask for a one-line address or attribution after your name, aligned right
e.g. PAULA MARTIN
University of Dundee, UK
[add country unless address is in capital city]

Please submit two copies of the text to the Reviews Editor, Angela Croome, Flat 2, 14 The Paragon, Blackheath, London SE3 0PA, UK.  If possible a copy should also be emailed to the Editor (
paula@arnydie.demon.co.uk).

Reviewers will be sent proofs if they ask for them, but the production process will not wait if they are not returned within the specified time.

Reviewers will receive one copy of the reviews section (electronically where possible). Where reviewers require a printed offprint, this should be requested from the editor.

Editorial Board

Editor 
Paula Martin
University of Dundee
paula@arnydie.demon.co.uk

Reviews Editor
Angela Croome
London

Chair of the Nautical Archaeology Society
Lucy Blue
University of Southampton
lkb@soton.ac.uk

Advisory Editors 
Beat Arnold (Musée cantonal d'archéologie, Nêuchâtel, Switzerland)
George Bass (Institute of Nautical Archaeology, Texas A&M University, USA)
Toni Carrell (Ships of Discovery, Galveston, USA)
Ole Crumlin-Pedersen (Viking Ship Museum, Roskilde, Denmark)
N. C. Flemming (Oceanography Centre, Southampton University, UK)
Jeremy Green (Western Australia Maritime Museum, Fremantle, Australia)
Nergis Gunsenin (Istanbul University, Turkey)
Brian Lavery (National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, UK)
Colin Martin (School of History, University of St Andrews, Scotland)
Seán McGrail (Centre for Maritime Archaeology, Southampton University, UK)
A. J. Parker (Centre for Maritime Archaeology and History, University of Bristol, UK)
Owain Roberts (University College of North Wales, Bangor, Wales)
Cheryl Ward (Florida State University, USA)




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