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期刊名称:GEOFLUIDS

ISSN:1468-8115
出版频率:Continuous publication
出版社:WILEY-HINDAWI, ADAM HOUSE, 3RD FL, 1 FITZROY SQ, LONDON, ENGLAND, WIT 5HE
  出版社网址:http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/index.html
期刊网址:http://www.wiley.com/bw/submit.asp?ref=1468-8115&site=1
影响因子:2.176
主题范畴:GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS;    GEOLOGY

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



About the journal

Instructions to Authors

Submission of Manuscripts

Authors in North America should send their manuscripts to:

Professor Grant Garven
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Johns Hopkins University
301 Olin Hall
San Martin Drive
Baltimore
Maryland
21218-2687
USA
Tel: (+1) 410 516 8689
Fax: (+1) 410 516 7933
e-mail: garven@jhu.edu

Authors from outside North America should send their manuscripts to:

Dr John Parnell
Department of Geology and Petroleum Geology
University of Aberdeen
Meston Building
Kings College
Aberdeen
AB24 3UE
UK
Tel: (+44) 1224 273 464
Fax: (+44) 1224 272 785
e-mail: j.parnell@abdn.ac.uk

Or

Professor Bruce Yardley
School of Earth Sciences
University of Leeds
Leeds
LS2 9JT
UK
Tel: (+44) 113 233 5227
Fax: (+44) 113 233 5259
e-mail: bruce@earth.leeds.ac.uk

Preference will be given to papers of less then 15 journal pages (one journal page is equivalent to approximately 1,400 words, or word-equivalents). Authors wishing to submit longer manuscripts or review articles should contact the Editors first to discuss their plans. We will offer accelerated publication for short (less than 6 journal pages) articles on particularly timely themes and Technical Notes. These will describe new methodologies, such as experimental procedures, which are of general interest.

Papers must be submitted exclusively to the Journal, on the understanding that they have not been and will not be published elsewhere. Papers accepted for publication become the copyright of Blackwell Science Ltd. The Editors retain the right to modify the style and length of a contribution (major changes being agreed with the corresponding author) and to decide the time of publication.

Articles submitted on disk should be accompanied by a completed File Description Form.

Manuscripts
Three copies of the paper should be submitted, together with three sets of the illustrations to aid refereeing . They should be typed with double spacing on one side of the paper on A4, or similar, paper (297 ¡Á 210 mm), with generous margins. Pages should be numbered consecutively, including those of acknowledgements, references, tables and figure legends. Papers must be in English, and spelling should conform to The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English, or to Merriam Websters new Collegiate Dictionary for US spelling. Authors may use UK or US spelling, but must be consistent in their use throughout the paper. Authors are advised to retain a copy of the paper in case of loss, as the Editors cannot accept responsibility for loss or damage. Papers will be acknowledged on receipt.

The typescript should include a title page with a concise, but informative, title and a short running title for page headings, a list of authors names with addresses including phone, fax and e-mail contact details, and the name and full contact details of the author to whom proofs and offprint requests should be directed.

There should also be an informative abstract comprising a summary of no more than 300 words.

The main body of the text should be arranged under no more than three different levels of heading. It would be helpful if the authors could indicate in the margin the relative importance of a heading by the use of ringed capital letters, i.e. (A) for the main heading, (B) for the secondary heading, etc.

Articles submitted on

Units, Symbols and Abbreviations

SI units are preferred and SI equivalents must be specified at the first mention of non-SI units. Where imperial units are used the metric equivalent should follow in brackets. Statistics and measurements should be given in numeric form, e.g. 2 m, except where the number begins a sentence. When a number is used to identify a feature, it should be given in figures with the feature capitalized (e.g. Section 10, Locality 5). The word figure should not be shortened to Fig.. Technical terms should be spelt out in full the first time they appear in the article.

References

Authors should use the system illustrated below. Only full articles that have been published or are "in press" may be included in the reference list. In the text references should be cited by giving the authors name with the year of publication in parentheses, and should be given in date order (Bethke (1983), Borja & Dreiss (1990) ) and, for three or more authors, Miller et al. (1977). When different papers with the same first author and the same year are cited, a, b, c, etc., should be put after the year of publication.

References should be listed in alphabetical order at the end of the paper in the following standard form, giving the names of all authors and with the names of publications given in full:

Muir-Wood R (1994) Earthquakes, strain-cycling, and the mobilization of fluids. In: Geofluids: Origin, Migration and Evolution of Fluids in Sedimentary Basins (ed. J. Parnell) Geological Society of London Special Publication, 78, 85-98.

Hanson R B (1992) Effects of fluid production on fluid flow during regional and contact metamorphism. Journal of Metamorphic Geology, 10, 87-97.

Reineck H E & Singh I B (1980) Depositional Sedimentary Environments, 2nd edn. SpringerVerlag, Berlin.

Italics may be used for the publication title and bold for the volume, however if these are not available to you then plain text is acceptable. Do not underline words to indicate use of italic.

Tables

Tables must be typed on separate sheets. They should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals. Tables should be typed as text using tabs to align columns. Verticle lines should not be used to align columns. Column headings should be brief, with units of measurement in parentheses. Please do not use graphics software to create tables. All other illustrations including photographs are classified as figures and should be numbered consecutively.

Figures

On acceptance of manuscript please send us digital versions of your figures if at all possible. EPS and TIFF files are preferable, but please consult our Web site for complete instructions (URLs below). Note that your paper will go through production more quickly if your figures do not have to be redrawn or relabelled.

Please ensure that electronic artwork is prepared such that, after reduction to fit across one column (80 mm) or a full page width (170 mm) all lettering will be clear and easy to read. Subpanels of multipanel figures should be labelled with lower-case roman letters, (a), (b), etc..., at the top left-hand corner of each section, if possible, (i) within the panel of a line diagram or (ii) to the left of or below a half-tone. Multipanel figures that have common axes need not have all axes labelled if the abscissa axis closest to the bottom of the page or the ordinate axis closest to the left are also valid for those axes further up the page or further to the right respectively. Final lettering, after reduction, should be a minimum of 8 point (2 mm tall). Avoid using tints if possible. If they are absolutely necessary please make them coarse. Do not incorporate artwork into text files. Always enclose a hardcopy of digitally supplied figures.

Original drawings or photographs should be supplied for reproduction. If figures are to be submitted as hand-drawn line drawings, they should be prepared to a professional standard on good-quality drafting film or white paper. Drawings should be suitable for 50% reduction. Bar scales are preferred to numerical scales.

Good-quality glossy prints of half-tones should be sent with lettering added. Half-tones can be submitted either unmounted or mounted (but not on stiff card) when composite photographs may form a single figure.

Full details of electronic artwork submission can be found at the following URL:

http://www.blackwell-science.com/elecmed/digilla.htm

Each illustration must have a caption that makes the material completely understandable without reference to the text. Captions must be typed on a separate sheet. The approximate position of the illustration should be indicated in the margin of the typescript. All illustrations should have their numbers and the authors name written on the back in pencil.

Authors are asked to keep all original illustrations until needed and to send initially three sets of sharp glossy prints of photographs and top copies of all other figures. Authors will be asked to send their originals to the Editor or publisher when their paper is accepted.

Mathematics

In-line equations should be typed as text. Use of graphics programs and equation editors should be avoided, unless part of commonly available word-processing packages (Word, WordPerfect, etc..). A full Nomenclature defining symbols and terms should be provided after the Acknowledgments in the text.

Colour Illustrations

The Journal welcomes colour illustrations. These will normally incur a page charge but, at the editors discretion, may be published at no cost to the author. Any author submitting colour illustrations for publication must forward a completed and signed Colour Work Agreement to the editor with their manuscript. Charges for colour are shown on the form.

Book Reviews

Books for review should be sent to Dr John Parnell (Europe) or Professor Grant Garven (North America and rest of world)

Production Editor

Contact the Production Editor for queries concerning accepted manuscripts only.

Electronic Publication

The Journal will be published in online form as well as in paper copy. Authors are encouraged to use the online version to include colour illustration, large data sets, 3-D or moving images and should contact the Production Editor for further information, preferably prior to submission. Examples of the type of additional material which may be included can be found at www.blackwell-science.com/demos/.

Proofs

Page proofs will be sent to the corresponding author only (in PDF format via e-mail unless technical problems for the author preclude this) and the corrections should be returned to the Production Editor within 3 days. We prefer authors to print out their proofs and send hard-copy corrections rather than responding by e-mail. Major alterations to the text and illustrations are only allowable in exceptional circumstances and the additional cost may be charged to the author.

Offprints

Twenty-five offprints of each paper are supplied free to the corresponding author and additional copies may be ordered when proofs are returned. Offprints will be sent out about 6 weeks after publication.

Cover photograph

If you have a photograph that would be suitable for the front cover of Geofluids please contact one of the Editors.

Copyright
Authors will be required to assign copyright in their paper to Blackwell Publishing. Copyright assignment is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless copyright has been assigned. (Papers subject to government or Crown copyright are exempt from this requirement). To assist authors, the editorial office will supply an appropriate copyright assignment form. Alternatively authors may like to download a copy of the form here, please use the correct form for the editor who is handling your submission:
For Prof. Grant Garven use Prof. Garven copyright
For Dr John Parnell use Dr Parnell copyright
For Prof. Bruce Yardley use Prof. Yardley copyright

Referee Report Form
Individuals refereeing articles on behalf of the journal may wish to use the Referee Report Form to structure their comments.
Editorial Board

Grant Garven, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 301 Olin Hall, San Martin Drive, Baltimore, Maryland 21218-2687, USA
Tel: + 1 410 516 8689
Fax: + 1 410 516 7933
e-mail: garven@jhu.edu

John Parnell, Department of Geology and Petroleum Geology, University of Aberdeen, Meston Building, Kings College, Aberdeen, AB24 3UE, UK
Tel: + 44 1224 273 464
Fax: + 44 1224 272 785
e-mail: j.parnell@abdn.ac.uk

Bruce Yardley, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK
Tel: + 44 113 233 5200
Fax: + 44 113 233 5259
e-mail: b.yardley@earth.leeds.ac.uk

Editorial Board

Stefan Arnorsson, University of Reykjavik, Iceland

Chris Ballentine, University of Manchester, UK

Craig M. Bethke, University of Illinois, Urbana, USA

Knut Bjorlykke, University of Oslo, Norway

Robert Bodnar, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, USA

Susan L. Brantley, Pennsylvania State University, USA

Ron Bruhn, University of Utah, USA

Kurt Bucher, Albert-Ludwigs-Universit??t, Freiburg, Germany

Michel Cathelineau, CREGU, Nancy, France

Stephen Cox, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

Gregory M. Dipple, University of British Columbia, Canada

Andrew Fisher, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA

Peter B. Flemings, Pennslyvania State University, USA

Shemin Ge, University of Colorado

Miriam Kastner, University of California, San Diego, USA

Volker Haak, GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam (GFZ), Germany

Jeffrey S. Hanor, Louisianna State University, USA

Murray Hitzman, Colorado School of Mines, USA

Paul J. Hooker     Enviros Consulting Ltd, Melton Mowbray, USA

Ian E. Hutcheon, The University of Calgary, Canada

Steve Ingebritsen, US Geological Survey, Menlo Park, USA

Bjorn Jamtveit, University of Oslo, Norway

Miriam Kastner, University of California

Steve Larter, University of Newcastle, UK

Mark Lisk, CSIRO, Bentley, WA, Australia

Stephan Matthai, Imperial College, London, UK

Andrew M. McCaig, University of Leeds, UK

J. Casey Moore, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA

Chris Neuzil, U. S. Geological Survey

Nick Oliver, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia

Peter, Ortoleva, Indiana University, USA

Mark Person, University of Minnesota, USA

Jeffrey Raffensperger, US Geological Survey, Baltimore, USA

Ward Sanford, U. S. Geological Survey

David Savage, Quintessa Ltd, Henley-on-Thames, UK

Jacques Schott, Universit¨¦ Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France

Kirill Schmulovich, Institute of Experimental Mineralogy, Moscow, Russia

Everett Shock, Washington University - St Louis, USA

Richard H. Sibson, University of Otago, New Zealand

Li Sitian, China University of Geosciences, Beijing, China

Carl Steefel, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Livermore, CA, USA

Richard E. Swarbrick, University of Durham, UK

Oyrind Sylta, SINTEF Petroleumsforskning AS, Trondheim, Norway

Jacques L.R. Touret, Free University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

Guy Vasseur, University de Montpellier, France

Lynn M. Walter, University of Michigan, USA

Bruce Watson, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, NY, USA

Jamie Wilkinson, Imperial College, London, UK

Anthony E. Williams-Jones McGill University, Montreal, Canada

Richard Worden, University of Liverpool, UK

 Geofluids provides an international forum for original research  into the role of fluids in mineralogical, chemical, and structural evolution of the Earths crust. Its explicit aim is to disseminate ideas across the range of sub-disciplines in which Geofluids research is carried out. To this end authors are encouraged to stress the transdisciplinary relevance of their research, and to make their work as accessible as possible to readers from other sub-disciplines.

Geofluids emphasizes both chemical and physical aspects of subsurface fluids throughout the Earths crust (although excluding silicate melts). Geofluids spans studies of groundwater, terrestrial or submarine geothermal fluids, basinal brines, petroleum, metamorphic waters or magmatic fluids, but requires relevance to processes that are significant on a geological time scale.

Articles may describe theoretical or observational studies, explore the geologic, geochemical, or geophysical attributes of subsurface fluids, quantify the geologic controls on permeability, geochemical transport and heat transport, or document applied aspects of crustal fluid behaviour. Examples of  areas covered include, but are not restricted to:

¡ì        composition and origins of geofluids

¡ì         hydrodynamics of sedimentary basins; role of regional groundwater flow in geologic processes

¡ì         chemical or physical behaviour of Geofluids in porous or fractured rocks

¡ì         palaeohydrology of flow regimes as inferred from isotope systematics and fluid inclusion studies

¡ì         relations between past or present fluid flow and geothermics of the Earths crust

¡ì         structural and seismic controls on deep fluid migration

¡ì          the role of fluids in crustal deformation

¡ì         role of groundwater chemistry in landscape evolution, soil development, and evaporite formation

¡ì         mechanisms of petroleum generation, migration, and the interaction of hydrocarbons with groundwater


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