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期刊名称:PERMAFROST AND PERIGLACIAL PROCESSES

ISSN:1045-6740
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/
期刊网址:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1099-1530
影响因子:4.368
主题范畴:GEOGRAPHY, PHYSICAL;    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

Cover image for Permafrost and Periglacial Processes

 

   Permafrost and Periglacial Processes


   Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

Permafrost and Periglacial Processes is an international journal dedicated to the rapid publication of scientific and technical papers concerned with earth surface cryogenic processes, landforms and sediments present in a variety of (Sub) Arctic, Antarctic and High Mountain environments. It provides an efficient vehicle of communication amongst those with an interest in the cold, non-glacial geosciences. The focus is on (1) original research based on geomorphological, hydrological, sedimentological, geotechnical and engineering aspects of these areas and (2) original research carried out upon relict features where the objective has been to reconstruct the nature of the processes and/or palaeoenvironments which gave rise to these features, as opposed to purely stratigraphical considerations. The journal also publishes short communications, reviews, discussions and book reviews. The high scientific standard, interdisciplinary character and worldwide representation of PPP are maintained by regional editorial support and a rigorous refereeing system.

THE SUBJECT MATTER

GEOCRYOLOGY, PAST AND PRESENT: the study of frozen ground (seasonally frozen ground as well as permafrost), excluding glacier ice; active and inactive processes and forms; cold-climate or (Sub) Arctic, Antarctic and High Mountain environments.

CRYOGENIC PROCESSES AND FROST ACTION: soil freezing, freeze-thaw indices/cycles; thermal contraction and ice segregation processes, frost wedging/heaving/thrusting/cracking/sorting; mass-wasting processes and deposits; rock glaciers; slopewash processes and deposits; frost weathering.

PERMAFROST AND GROUND ICE: permafrost distribution/depth/thickness; origin of permafrost, including alpine and offshore permafrost, and relation to climate; forms of ground ice; thermal regime of active layer/permafrost and climatic change; frozen ground chemistry, mechanics and physics; permafrost aggradation/degradation; thermokarst.

PERIGLACIAL LANDSCAPE EVOLUTION: patterned ground forms; frost mounds and other periglacial phenomena; nivation forms; cryoplanation and cryopediments; fluvial activity, lacustrine and coastal forms, eolian activity, snow and meltwater activity.

PLEISTOCENE PERIGLACIAL ENVIRONMENTS: relict or ancient (Pleistocene) periglacial structures, deposits and landforms; pseudomorphs; palaeogeographic, palaeo-climatic and palaeo-environmental reconstruction and implications.

PRESENT PERIGLACIAL ENVIRONMENTS - MANAGEMENT AND UTILIZATION OF RESOURCES, GEOTECHNICAL AND APPLIED ASPECTS: aspects of hydraulic, agricultural, forestry, geotechnical (buildings, highways, railways, airfields) and sanitary engineering in relation to permafrost and frost action processes; mining, hydrocarbon exploration, production and transportation in permafrost regions; seismic surveys and remote sensing in permafrost surveys; sensitivity of permafrost ecosystems, environmental protection, nature conservation and management.

Abstracting and Indexing Services


  • Bibliography & Index of Geology (GeoRef)
  • CAB Abstracts
  • Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
  • Current Contents®/Physical, Chemical & Earth Sciences (ISI)
  • GeoArchive (Geosystems)
  • Geobase (Elsevier)
  • Geographical Abstracts: Physical Geography (Elsevier)
  • GeoRef
  • GeoSEARCH (Geosystems)
  • Groundwater & Soil Contamination Database
  • Hydrotitles (Geosystems)
  • ISI Alerting Services
  • Science Citation Index Expanded (also known as SciSearch®) (ISI)
  • Soil and Fertilizer Abstracts (CAB)

Instructions to Authors

Permafrost and Periglacial Processes publishes papers, short communications, reviews, discussions, and book reviews in English or French.

  • Papers - are reports of varying lengths that describe the results of research. The normal page limit is 30 double-spaced typewritten A4 pages. Papers are subject to a refereeing system, with originality and excellence as the main criteria for acceptance.
  • Short communications - are short reports on methodology, technique or instrumentation, that do not require lengthy accounts of background and principles. They will undergo the normal review process.
  • Discussions - of articles published in recent issues of Permafrost and Periglacial Processes may be accepted for publication if they are brief and of a technical or interpretative nature. Replies to such discussions are invited from the original authors and are generally published in the same issue.
  • Book reviews - are critical assessments of major recent publications to the permafrost and periglacial literature. The normal page limit is 5 double-spaced typewritten pages.

Initial Manuscript Submission. Submit three copies of the manuscript (including copies of tables and illustrations) to Professor H French, Departments of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1N 6N5.

Authors must also supply:

  • an electronic copy of the final version (see section below),
  • a Copyright Transfer Agreement with original signature(s) - without this we are unable to accept the submission, and
  • permission grants - if the manuscript contains extracts, including illustrations, from other copyright works (including material from on-line or intranet sources) it is the author's responsibility to obtain written permission from the owners of the publishing rights to reproduce such extracts using the Wiley Permission Request Form. Permission grants should be submitted with the manuscript.

Submitted manuscripts should not have been previously published and should not be submitted for publication elsewhere while they are under consideration by Wiley. Submitted material will not be returned to the author unless specifically requested.

Electronic submission. The electronic copy of the final, revised manuscript must be sent to the Editor together with the paper copy. Disks should be PC or Mac formatted; write on the disk the software package used, the name of the author and the name of the journal. We are able to use most word processing packages, but prefer Word or WordPerfect and TeX or one of its derivatives.

Illustrations must be submitted in electronic format where possible. Save each figure as a separate file, in TIFF or EPS format preferably, and include the source file. Write on the disk the software package used to create them; we favour dedicated illustration packages over tools such as Excel or Powerpoint.

Manuscript style. The languages of the journal are English or French. All submissions including book reviews must have a title, be printed on one side of the paper, be double-line spaced and have a margin of 3cm all round. Illustrations and tables must be printed on separate sheets, and not be incorporated into the text.

  • The title page must list the full title, short title and names and affiliations of all authors. Give the full address, including email, telephone and fax, of the author who is to check the proofs.
  • Include the name(s) of any sponsor(s) of the research contained in the paper, along with grant number(s).
  • Supply an abstract of up to 200 words for all articles [except book reviews]. An abstract is a concise summary of the whole paper, not just the conclusions, and is understandable without reference to the rest of the paper. It should contain no citation to other published work.
  • Include up to six keywords that describe your paper for indexing purposes.
  • Spelling - should follow that of Webster's Third New International Dictionary or the Oxford English Dictionary. Authors are responsible for consistency in spelling.
  • Symbols, units and nomenclature - should conform to international recommendations such as those of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (see Document U.I.P 11 (S.U.N.) 65-3 (1965)) and the International Union of Pure Applied Chemistry (see the new Manual of Symbols and Terminology for Physiochemical Quantities and Units (1975)).

    Metric units should be used for metric equivalents given. The use of SI units (Syst¨¨me International d'unit¨¦s) is encouraged. This is explained in the Metric Practice Guide (published in 1979 by the Canadian Standards Association, 178 Rexdale Boulevard, Rexdale, Ontario, Canada M9W 1R3) and in Quantities, Units and Symbols (published in 1971 by the Royal Society, 6 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AG, England).

    Permafrost terminology should follow that recommended in either i) Glossary of permafrost and related ground ice terms (published in 1988 by the Permafrost Subcommittee, Associate Committee on Geotechnical Research, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, Canada K1A 0R6, Technical Memorandum 142, ISBN 0-660-12540-4; also available in French) or ii) Glossary of permafrost and related ground ice terms. Multilingual glossary (Chinese, English, French, German, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Swedish and Spanish). Compiled by R. O. Van Everdingen (1998): Permafrost Terminology Working Group, International Permafrost Association, 278 pp. (To order: contact R. O. Van Everdingen, 2712 Chalice Road N. W., Calgary T2L 1C8, Canada.

Reference style. References should be quoted in the text as name and year within brackets and listed at the end of the paper alphabetically. Where reference is made to more than one work by the same author published in the same year, identify each citation in the text as follows: (Collins, 1998a), (Collins, 1998b). Where three or more authors are listed in the reference list, please cite in the text as (Collins et al., 1998)

All references must be complete and accurate. Online citations should include date of access. If necessary, cite unpublished or personal work in the text but do not include it in the reference list. References should be listed in the following style:

French HM, Bennett L, Hayley DW. 1986. Ground ice conditions near Rea Point and on Sabine Peninsula, eastern Melville Island. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 23: 1389-1400.
Harry DG. 1988. Ground ice and permafrost. In Advances in Periglacial Geomorphology, Clark MJ (ed). John Wiley & Sons: New York; 113-249.


Footnotes are to be avoided. References in Russian and Chinese should be translated into English or French and the original language should be indicated in brackets at the end of the reference.

Illustrations. Supply each illustration on a separate sheet, with the lead author's name and the figure number, with the top of the figure indicated, on the reverse. Supply original photographs; photocopies or previously printed material will not be used. Line artwork must be high-quality laser output (not photocopies). Tints are not acceptable; lettering must be of a reasonable size that would still be clearly legible upon reduction, and consistent within each figure and set of figures. Supply artwork at the intended size for printing.

The cost of printing colour illustrations in the journal will be charged to the author. If colour illustrations are supplied electronically in either TIFF or EPS format, they may be used in the PDF of the article at no cost to the author, even if this illustration was printed in black and white in the journal. The PDF will appear on the Wiley InterScience site.

Copyright. To enable the publisher to disseminate the author's work to the fullest extent, the author must sign a Copyright Transfer Agreement, transferring copyright in the article from the author to the publisher, and submit the original signed agreement with the article presented for publication. A copy of the agreement to be used (which may be photocopied) can be found in the first issue of each volume of Permafrost and Periglacial Processes. Copies may also be obtained from the journal editor or publisher, or may be printed from this website.

Further Information. Proofs will be sent to the corresponding author for checking. This stage is to be used only to correct errors that may have been introduced during the production process. Prompt return of the corrected proofs, preferably within two days of receipt, will minimise the risk of the paper being held over to a later issue. 25 complimentary offprints will be provided to the author who checked the proofs, unless otherwise indicated. Further offprints and copies of the journal may be ordered. There is no page charge to authors.


Editorial Board
EDITOR IN CHIEF
Professor H.M. French
Departments of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada

ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Professor A.G. Lewkowicz
Department of Geography
University of Ottawa
Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5
Canada
Professor C. Harris
Department of Earth Sciences
University of Wales
Cardiff, CF1 3YE
UK

EDITORIAL BOARD
Professor Marie-Françoise Andr¨¦
Universit¨¦ Blaise-Pascal
Laboratoire de G¨¦ographie Physique
(UMR 6042-CNRS)
4 rue Ledru, 63057 Clermont-Ferrand Cedex
France
Professor C. Burn
Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
Carleton University
Ottawa, ON, K1S 5B6
Canada
Professor G.-D. Cheng
CAREERI
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Lanzhou 73000, Gansu
People's Republic of China
Professor F. Dramis
Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche
Universit¨¤ Di Roma Tre
Largo San Leonardo Murialdo 1
00146 Roma, Italy
Professor W. Haeberli
Department of Geography
University of Zurich
Winterthurestrasse 190
CH 8057 Zurich, Switzerland
Professor O. Humlum
The Univeristy Courses on Svalbard (UNIS)
Postboks 156
N-9170 Longyearbyen, Norway
Professor V.N. Konishschev
Department of Cryolithography and Glaciology
Faculty of Geography, Moscow State University
Moscow 119899, Russia
Dr N. Matsuoka
Insitute of Geoscience, University of Tsukuba
Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8571, Japan
Dr. J. Murton
The School of Chemistry, Physics and Environmental Science
University of Sussex
Falmer
Brighton BN1 9QJ
UK
Professor F.E. Nelson
Department of Geography, University of Delaware
Newark, Delaware 19716-2541, USA
Professor C. E. Thorn
Department of Geography
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Urbana, IL 61801
USA
Professor J. Vandenberghe
Faculty of Earth Sciences
Vrije University
1081 HV Amsterdam
The Netherlands

HONORARY EDITORIAL BOARD
Professor E.A. Koster (Utrecht) Professor J.R Mackay (Vancouver)
Professor A. Pissart (Li¨¨ge) Professor N.N. Romanovskii (Moscow)
Professor A.L. Washburn (Seattle)


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