期刊名称:GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL

ISSN:0956-540X
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:OXFORD UNIV PRESS, GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD, ENGLAND, OX2 6DP
  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=0956-540X&site=1
影响因子:2.934
主题范畴:GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS

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



About the journal

     Geophysical Journal International is the foremost solid earth geophysics journal based in Europe. It has a worldwide Editorial Board and Editors from North America and the Pacific region as well as three offices in Europe. Likewise, contributions come from all over the world. The Journal aims to promote the understanding of the earth's internal structure, physical properties, evolution and processes; it publishes top quality research papers, fast-track papers, research notes, letters and book reviews on all aspects of theoretical, computational, applied and observational geophysics. Subjects covered include:

¡ì       the whole range of earthquake and controlled source seismology; tides, the Earth's gravitational field in relation to its shape, deep interior, crustal structure, stress and isostasy;

¡ì       palaeomagnetism and rock magnetism and their application to geomagnetism, internal processes and geotectonics;

¡ì        heat flow, electromagnetism, rheology and volcanology;

and geophysics applied to the structure and evolution of rifts, ridges, trenches, mountains, continents and oceans.

 


Instructions to Authors

 

Scope
Geophysical Journal International publishes original papers as well as reviews, Fast-track papers, research notes, letters and book reviews on all aspects of theoretical, computational, applied and observational geophysics, and welcomes appropriate submissions at any time. The subjects covered include the whole range of earthquake and controlled source seismology; tides, the Earths gravitational field in relation to its shape; deep interior, crustal structure, stress and isostasy; palaeomagnetism and rock magnetism and their application to geomagnetism, internal processes and geotectonics; heat flow, electromagnetism, rheology and volcanology; geophysics applied to the structure and evolution of rifts, ridges, trenches, mountains, continents and oceans; magnetic effects at the Earth due to upper atmosphere phenomena.

  • Copyright
    Authors will be required to assign copyright in their paper to the Royal Astronomical Society. Copyright assignment is a condition of publication and papers will not be published unless copyright has been assigned. (Papers subject to government or Crown copyright are exempt from this requirement.) Authors can obtain the copyright assignment form as a PDF file here.
  • Fast-track
    Geophysical Journal International aims to publish all papers in a timely fashion, but offers a special "Fast-track" mechanism to accelerate the progress of short papers where this is particularly appropriate.
  • Page charges
    There are no page charges for publication. Notes on other charges are detailed below.
  • New Colour Work Charges
    Authors are now charged a per-figure price for colour articles in the journal. Figures that are black-and-white in print but colour on the web are free of charge. Please read the detailed note below. The colour work form is here.
  • Sample Copy
    View a sample copy of the journal online, or order a print sample, at
    http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/samplefm.asp?ref=0956-540X.

Preparation of Manuscripts

Manuscripts should be in the English language. Spelling, grammar and syntax should follow normal English practice, such as found in the Oxford or Collins English Dictionaries.

Four complete copies of each paper, prepared on a typewriter or word-processor, in double line spacing, single column and full page width should be submitted. Please send submissions to the Executive Secretary of The Royal Astronomical Society, DGG Editor, EGS Editor, Head of Pacific Region office or coordinating head of the North American office (addresses as per the inside front cover or see the Editors page).

NOTE: Submit your paper to only one of the Editorial Offices.
Multiple submissions of the same paper will cause confusion and the likely result is a delay in the publication of your paper while the administration is sorted out.

Manuscripts should be prepared using one of the Geophysical Journal International style files and the preferred software formats are LaTeX or MS Word (versions 6/95 to 2000). Authors should enclose a completed File Description Form plus a covering letter detailing the corresponding authors postal address, electronic mail address, fax and phone numbers along with the names and addresses and/or e-mail addresses of up to four potential referees. Authors are expected to use English spellings throughout and to use correct grammar and syntax. European A4 or American Letter (8.5 in ¡Á 11 in) paper sizes are preferred. Footnotes are strongly discouraged. Except where common practice in geophysics dictates otherwise, units should follow the Syst¨¨me Internationale (SI). Pages must be numbered sequentially.

The manuscript should be arranged as follows:

  • Title page, containing authors names, affiliations and e-mail addresses
  • Summary and keywords
  • Main body of the paper
  • Reference list
  • Figure legends*
  • Tables*
  • Figures*
  • Appendices*

Sections marked (*) are discretionary. All others are essential. The form of each section is described below.

Title page:

In the format:

  • The full title of the paper as it will appear in the journal
  • Authors' names
  • Authors' affiliations, linked to the list of names, if appropriate, by superscript numbers
  • The following proforma, for use by the receiving Geophysical Journal International office:

Accepted... . Received...; in original form...

  • An abbreviated title suitable for page headings
  • Name and contact details of the corresponding author including phone/fax/e-mail

Summary: All papers must be accompanied by a summary of no more than 500 words and by an abbreviated title suitable for page headings. The summary should be a single paragraph that states the nature of the investigation and summarises the conclusions drawn: all papers must begin with a summary. References should not be cited. Abbreviations should be avoided.

Keywords: Authors should provide a list of up to six key words, representative of the content of their paper. The keywords will be printed at the end of the summary and used for indexing purposes. Keywords are used to construct the Journals topical index, published before every index, and are increasingly exploited by electronic indexing services. The list of keywords is therefore important in ensuring that your paper reaches its target audience.

Main Body of Paper: Text should be laid out across the width of the page in a single column. Leave wide margins and double-space the text to allow room for reviewers to make annotations. Units should always be according to the Syst¨¨me Internationale (SI) unless common practice in geophysics dictates otherwise. Abbreviations of names or concepts should be defined at first occurrence. Indicate in the margin the location of figures and tables. Sections and subsections should be clearly headed, but the numbering of sections is optional. Leave extra space between the end of a section and the heading of the following section.

Equations should be numbered sequentially with Arabic numerals. All equations should be numbered regardless of whether or not they are referred to in the text. Punctuate equations as part of the sentence to which they relate. Special typefaces (e.g. Greek), and the placing of subscripts and superscripts should be indicated clearly. Text is normally printed down two columns per page; papers with long equations will be printed across the whole page at the production editors discretion or at the request of the author. Note that the journal style for vectors is Bold Roman Times; matrices should be Bold Roman Univers; tensors should be Bold Italic Times and variables and scalars should be italicized. Modifiers are set in Roman type.

Reference List: References should be listed in alphabetical order at the end of the paper. The abbreviations for the names of periodicals used in Geophysical Journal International are those given in the World List of Scientific Periodicals, 4th edition. If this is not available, examine the reference lists of papers in any recent issue to find the abbreviations, otherwise, give the title of the journal in full, and the Geophysical Journal International copy editor will substitute the correct abbreviation on acceptance. References should be cited in the text by giving the authors name with the year of publication in parentheses. When referring to a work by three or more authors use only the first name followed by et al. even on first use, for example, "Adams et al. (1997)". Where several papers by the same first author and from the same year are cited and the citations would otherwise take the same form, put the letters a, b, c, etc. after the year of publication to distinguish them, for example, "(Adams et al. 1997a; Adams et al. 1997b)".

Examples:

In text: Smith & Jones (1990); (Smith & Jones 1990); (Smith, private communication, 1990); (Smith et al. 1990) Three authors, listing only the first author even on first mention.

In reference list:

For journals regularly cited by Geophysical Journal International authors.

Author, A.B., Author, C.D. & Author, E.F., 1990. Full article title, J. Title Abbrev., 000, 000--000.

Author, A.B., Author, C.D. & Author, E.F., 1990. Book Title, 2nd edn, Vol. 2, pp. 000--000, Publisher, Place.

Author, A.B., Author, C.D. & Author, E.F., 1990. Chapter title, in Book Title, pp. 000--000, ed. Author, G.H., Publisher, Place.

Author, A.B., 1990. Thesis title, PhD thesis, University, Place.

Figure Legends: Figure captions should summarise the figure and explain any annotations used. They should be produced on a separate sheet; they should not run on from the main body of text.

Tables: Tables must be un-ruled, be numbered serially with Arabic numerals and have captions. They should be typed on separate sheets and their positions in the text should be indicated on the copy. Each table must be cited in the text. Headings should be brief. Units should be placed at the head of each column. Note that, if typed in a clear and compact manner, tables may be treated as camera-ready copy. Refer to Tables in the text as, "in Table 1" or "(Table 1)"

Figures: Four copies, for use by editors and referees, should be provided with the legend printed underneath the corresponding diagram. We would encourage authors to submit digital figures on disk and refer to the Electronic Submission section, below. Diagrams should either be in the form of black and white photographs or laser prints. Line drawings, black ink on tracing material with a line weight and lettering suitable for reduction to fit the type area, are also acceptable. Photographs for reproduction should be un-mounted glossy prints and should be accompanied by lettered Xerox copies. Please ensure that the copies submitted are fully legible, as these will be sent to reviewers for assessment. Figures should normally be placed one per page. Grey scales are preferable to colour figures.

Refer to figures in text as "...Fig. 1(a)" or "...Figs 2 and 3" or "... (Fig. 1a); (Figs 1a and b)".

Colour Figures: Colour illustrations are welcome, but should only be used when details cannot be adequately observed on black and white photographs. Authors will be asked to contribute to the cost of reproducing colour illustrations. Authors intending to publish colour illustrations should read the following with care.

It is the policy of GJI for authors to pay the full cost for the reproduction of their colour artwork.

Therefore, please note that if there is colour artwork in your manuscript when it is accepted for publication, Blackwell Publishing require you to complete and return a colour work agreement form before your paper can be published. This form can be downloaded as a PDF* from the internet. The web address for the form is:
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/Sub3000_F_CoW.pdf

If you are unable to access the internet, or are unable to download the form, please contact the Production Editor at the address below. They will be able to email or FAX a form to you.

Once completed, please return the form to the Production Editor at the following address:

  • The Production Editor
    Geophysical Journal International
    Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    23 Ainslie Place
    Edinburgh
    EH3 6AJ
    UK
  • Fax: +44 (0)131 226 3803

Any article received by Blackwell Publishing with colour work will not be published until the form has been returned.

*To read PDF files, you must have Acrobat Reader installed on your computer. If you do not have this program, this is available as a free download from the following web address: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html

Appendices: A title is required for each appendix. Appendices should appear after the references and should be named A, B, C, etc. Equations in an appendix should be numbered (A1), (A2), etc. If Appendices are greater than 25 journal pages the journal may choose to publish the material via electronic means only. Submission ProceduresFour complete paper copies of each manuscript, including all figures, are required. One copy should be prepared on one side of the paper only, but the other three should use both sides, to reduce postage costs. Manuscripts may be submitted either to the main Editorial Office at the Royal Astronomical Society, or to one of the following: the DGG Editor, the EGS Editor, the American Coordinating Editor, or the Pacific Region Editor. The addresses are printed on the inside front cover of every issue and are available here on the Editors page. Authors should enclose a covering letter giving the corresponding authors current contact address, including email, fax and phone, if available. Where possible, the covering letter should also include the names and addresses and/or e-mail addresses of up to four potential referees. The receiving office will acknowledge receipt of your manuscript promptly, and will be in touch with you as its consideration progresses.

Additional Notes

Fast-track Papers: Fast-track papers are intended for new research meriting urgent publication. When submitting a paper authors should give reasons why the manuscript warrants Fast-track publication. Fast-track papers should not exceed four pages of the Journal. As an approximate guide, papers should be of no more than 4000 words including figures; each figure will be judged to occupy the space of 300 words. Authors should provide a word count. Papers should be clearly marked "Fast-track" and should be accompanied by a list of up to four potential referees who may be used at the discretion of the Editor. Fast-track papers should only be submitted to the main Editorial Office.

Charges:

  • There are no page charges for publication.
  • Reprints may be obtained at prices quoted on the order form which accompanies proofs, provided that the order is placed with the publishers when the proofs are returned.
  • Colour figures can often convey an authors' message powerfully and concisely, and recent developments in printing technology have significantly reduced the cost of producing pages in colour. Unfortunately, the cost does not permit its routine in the journal so charges are levied on colour figures. The cost of publishing colour work is detailed on the Form.
  • Authors will be charged for excessive alterations made in proof.
  • Unusual costs incurred by the journal (e.g. in preparing inappropriately drafted figures for press) may be recovered from authors.

Electronic Submission of Manuscripts: We regret that the Editorial Offices are unable to accept initial submissions in electronic form but this may change in forthcoming months. The RAS is currently reviewing the possibility of receiving initial submissions of manuscripts and handling the review process in electronic form.  Authors of Fast-track or other short papers who are interested in participating should contact the Editorial Assistant

Electronic Submission of Final Copy: Full instructions for submitting an electronic version of a manuscript will be sent to authors from the main editorial office after acceptance for publication. Once accepted, authors are strongly encouraged to send an electronic version of their accepted manuscript to the publisher. Accepted copy may be submitted via ftp or sent on disk/CD. FTP instructions will be sent to authors once a manuscript has been accepted. Most formats in general use, including TeX and LaTeX, are acceptable but must be specified on a disk submission form which can be obtained once the paper has been accepted by emailing the Editorial Assistant with a message containing "get disk form" in the subject line. The preferred formats for text are MS Word (versions 6/95 to 2000) or LaTeX prepared using one of the Geophysical Journal International style files and BiBTeX with the \cite command. Electronic versions of manuscripts must be the same as the paper version accepted by the Editor.

Authors are strongly encouraged to submit computer-generated figures in digital form. Note that the process of scanning material such as typical laser printer output can reduce the quality of the printed figure, sometimes very substantially, and this step should be avoided. The publishers can accept figures in TIFF or EPS format, and where possible, these should be produced directly from the originating programs. Bitmapped elements should be produced at an effective resolution (i.e. at final printing) of 300 dpi or greater. Artwork guidelines are available here.

The files may be transmitted by ftp in accordance with the instructions provided on acceptance of your finished manuscript. Very large files should be compressed using the zip utility or may be forwarded on CD or Zip disk.

Original photographs or other forms of traditional artwork are also acceptable, and in such cases, the publishers facilities for preparation may offer better results than a basic desktop scanner. If authors are in doubt as to whether they should submit artwork in digital or traditional form, the Editorial Office or Production Editor will be pleased to advise.

We regret that it is not possible to accept manuscripts by electronic mail.

Proofs: Authors will be sent PDF files of proofs by e-mail. It is therefore essential that an e-mail address for the corresponding author is included on the manuscript title page. Proofs will be accompanied by a PDF file of a query sheet regarding ambiguities, unclear sections of text, missing information etc.

Proofs should be read carefully, particularly equations and other numerical matter. It is the responsibility of each author to check his or her proofs, reply to any queries, and notify the production team of any typographical errors. When updating the reference list, please be careful to update textual citations as well if the year has changed. Proofs should be returned by the date requested if at all possible - delay in returning the proofs will lead to delay in publication of the paper. Authors should keep their own alterations to a minimum - it may be necessary to charge authors for excessive alterations for which they are responsible. If it is suspected that extensive proof changes may alter the science in any significant way, the paper will be put on hold and referred back to the RAS for approval.

Offprints: Authors will be provided with electronic offprints of their paper. Paper offprints may be ordered at prices quoted on the order form which accompanies proofs, provided that the form is returned with the proofs. The cost is more if the order form arrives too late for the main print run. Offprints are normally dispatched within three weeks of publication of the issue in which the paper appears. Please contact the publishers if offprints do not arrive: however, please note that offprints are sent by surface mail, so overseas orders may take up to six weeks to arrive. Electronic offprints are sent to the first author at his or her first e-mail address on the title page of the paper, unless advised otherwise; therefore please ensure that the name, address and e-mail of the receiving author are clearly indicated on the manuscript title page if he or she is not the first author of the paper.

Further Advice: The editors will be glad to advise authors on any special points of difficulty.

Contact Addresses:

Main Editorial Office

Royal Astronomical Society
Burlington House
Piccadilly
London
W1J 0BQ
UK

lindam@ras.org.uk (Editorial Assistant)
Tel: +44 (0)20 7734 3307/4582
Fax: +44 (0)20 7494 0166

Blackwell Publishing

Geophysical Journal International
23 Ainslie Place
Edinburgh
EH3 6AJ
UK

gji@oxon.blackwellpublishing.com (Production Editor)
Tel: +44 (0)131 226 7232
Fax: +44 (0)131 226 3803

Copyright
A Copyright Assignment Form must be completed for all articles accepted for publication in the journal. The form is available as a PDF.

 


Editorial Board

 

EDITORIAL OFFICE

The Royal Astronomical Society
Burlington House,
Piccadilly,
London
W1J 0BQ
UK

Editorial Assistant

Linda Marques
lindam@ras.org.uk
Fax: +44 207 494 0166 

Managing Editor
J. Russ Evans
British Geological Survey, Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3LA, Scotland, UK
Phone: + 44 131 650 0213
Fax: + 44 131 667 1877
russ.evans@bgs.ac.uk

Russ Evans is Head of Discipline for Geophysics and Marine Geoscience at the British Geological Survey, and works in Edinburgh. Following a first degree in mathematics, and research into Earth tides and crustal deformation at Cambridge, he spent three years at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, DC, working on surface-wave studies of oceanic regions. Moving to the BGS in 1978, he undertook micro- earthquake studies in various parts of the world, investigating shear-wave propagation through anisotropic materials. Subsequently, his work moved towards applying geophysical techniques to geological problems, such as the neotectonics of NW Turkey, and seismic refraction studies in the UK. More recently, he led a small team imaging gravity and magnetic data, with applications in the hydrocarbons exploration industry. He takes an interest in science policy issues. He admits to finding all of these subjects entirely absorbing and always looks forward to reading his GJI postbag.

Joined GJI Board 1997

DGG Editor
Harro Schmeling
Institut fur Meteorologie und Geophysik, Feldbergstr. 47, D-60323, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Phone: + 49 69 798 22375
Fax: +49 69 798 23280
schmelin@geo10.geo physik.uni-frankfurt.de

Harro Schmeling is a geodynamicist now working at the Institute of Meteorology and Geophysics, University of Frankfurt. He has a broad experience in the numerical modelling of large-scale processes such as mantle convection and lithospheric crustal dynamics, but has also worked extensively on the physical properties of rocks at high temperatures. His current research interests include the physics of melting and associated transport mechanisms in the crust and mantle

Joined GJI Board 1992

EGS Editor
Raul Madariaga
Lab. De Geologie
Ecole Normale Superieure
24 Rue Lhomond
75231 Cedex 05, France
Phone: + 33 1 4432 2216
Fax: + 33 1 44 3222 00
madariag@geophys.ens.fr

Raul Madariaga is Professor of Geophysics at the Universit¨¦ Denis-Diderot in Paris and is a senior member of Institut Universitaire de France. He has recently moved his research group to Ecole Normale Superieure de Paris, having been head of the Seismological laboratory at Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris for the last 12 years. His research activities cover a wide domain of seismology--he has worked on the theory of free oscillations, the mechanics of seismic sources, ray tracing in complex structures and the numerical modelling of wave propagation by finite differences. In collaboration with researchers from French oil companies, the French Petroleum Institute and the Paris School of Mines he has contributed to the development of ray-based methods for migration and the inversion of seismic profiles. He has also published a series of studies on large earthquakes around the world, including events in the Peru-Chile subduction zone, Marianas and many intraplate areas along the Mediterranean and the Alpine belt. His main current interests are in the detailed field study of seismic gaps in Chile, the mechanics of earthquakes, and the processing of 3-D seismic profiles.
Joined GJI Board 1996, EGS office head from July 1999.

North American Co-ordinating Editor
Jeremy Bloxham
Earth & Planetary Sciences
Harvard University
404 Hoffman Lab
20 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
USA
Phone: + 1 617 496 9517
Fax: + 1 617 495 8839
bloxham@geophysics.harvard.ed

Jeremy Bloxham is Professor of Geophysics at Harvard University, where he has worked since 1985. His research interests are centred on the generation and evolution of planetary magnetic fields, with particular emphasis on the use of observations to constrain models of the Earths magnetic field. Other areas of interest include Earth rotation, the structure of the Earths deep interior, and geophysical inverse theory.
Joined GJI Board 1993

Pacific Region Editor
Malcolm Sambridge
Research School of Earth Sciences
Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200
Australia
Phone: +61 2 6125 4557
Fax: +61 2 6257 2737
malcolm@rses.anu.edu.au
http://rses.anu.edu.au/~malcolm

Malcolm Sambridge is a Senior Fellow at the Research School of Earth Sciences (RSES), Australian National University (ANU), Canberra. Following a first degree in Physics at Loughborough University in the UK, he moved to Dept. of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, in Cambridge, UK. where he was subjected to part III of the Mathematical Tripos. His Ph.D. was at ANU in the field of seismic tomography, where he developed a continuing interest in geophysical inverse problems. He held post-doctoral positions at Dept. of Terrestrial Magnetism, in the Carnegie institution of Washington, and then at the Institute of Theoretical Geophysics, Cambridge, before returning to RSES. His primary research interests are in mathematical and computational techniques for inverse problems in geophysics and geochemistry, mantle structure, seismic tomography and wave propagation.
Joined GJI Board 1999.

Board of Editors

Karsten Bahr (DGG Office)
Institut fur Geophysik, Universitat Gottingen, Herzberger landstrasse 180, Gottingen 37075, Germany
Phone: + 49 551 3974 53
Fax: + 49 551 397459
kbahr@julius.uni-physik.gwdg.de

Karsten Bahr has been a Professor of Geophysics at Gottingen University since 1996. His main field of research is electromagnetism. His research has covered both applied and theoretical aspects of this field, and he has held positions in industry as well as in research institutions. He has contributed to the theory of distortion of electromagnetic transfer functions by 3-D conductivity structures of all scale lengths. Recently, he has established an equipment pool for long-period electromagnetic soundings. More recent research interests include the conduction mechanism in the middle and lower crust and also in the asthenosphere.
Joined GJI Board 1997

Alan E. Beck (North American Office)
Earth Sciences Department
University of Western Ontario
London, ONT, N6A 5B7
Canada
Phone: + 1 519 661 3142
Fax: + 1 519 661 3837
abeck@julian.uwo.ca

Alan Beck, after 30 years as Head of Department of Geophysics, is now Professor Emeritus in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Western Ontario (the geophysics department was also retired when he retired). His life-long research interests have been centred on geothermal problems, concentrating most recently on the determination of ground surface temperature history, and hence inferring something about past climate change, from perturbed borehole temperature profiles. He has served on numerous national and international committees and has published over 100 papers (in good as well as not so good journals). He has retained only some of his administrative responsibilities, including Executive Secretary of the Council of Chairs of Canadian Earth Science Departments and membership of the Technical Advisory Committee to Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd for the Canadian Nuclear Fuel Waste Management Program.
Joined GJI Board 1994

Bruce Buffett (North American Office)
Department of Geophysics & Astronomy
University of British Columbia
2219 Main Hall
Vancouver V6T 1Z4
Canada
Phone: + 1 604 822 3466
Fax: + 1 604 822 6047
buffett@geop.ubc.ca

Bruce Buffett is an assistant professor in the Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of British Columbia. His research activities deal with the structure and dynamics of the Earths deep interior. Specific research interests include the thermal evolution of the core, energy sources for the geodynamo, core-mantle interactions and large-scale deformation of the Earth.
Joined GJI Board 1996

Roger A. Clark (UK Office)
Earth Sciences
Leeds University
Leeds, LS2 9JT
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 113 233 5221
Fax: +44 113 233 5259
r.clark@earth.leeds.ac.uk

Roger Clark is a geophysicist at the University of Leeds, UK, from where (in conjunction with MOD Blacknest) he obtained his PhD in 1982. He worked first as a consultant exploration geophysicist, specialising in seismic and potential field surveys for onshore hydrocarbon exploration, while maintaining research in earthquake focal mechanisms, lithospheric seismic structure, and nuclear explosion seismology. He is now a lecturer in the Department of Earth Sciences, where he continues to work on earthquake seismology and seismic verification of nuclear test-ban treaties; his main interests at present are processing of seismic reflection surveys, and the quantitative use of reflected wave amplitudes for attenuation and rock characterisation.
Joined GJI Board 1993

Professor Torsten Dahm
Institut f. Geophysik
Univ. Hamburg
Bundesstr. 55
20146 Hamburg
Germany
Fax: +49 (0)40 42838 5441
dahm@dkrz.de

Joined GJI Board 2003

C. Ebinger (UK Office)
Department of Geology
Royal Holloway College
University of London
Egham, Surrey
TW20 0EX
UK
Phone: +44 1784 443890
Fax: +44 1784 471780
c.ebinger@gl.rhul.ac.uk

Cindy Ebinger obtained a PhD in the MIT/Woods Hole Oceanographic Joint Programme in Oceaoography in 1988. She then was a National Research Council Post-doctoral Fellow at NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center, and a NATO Post-Doctoral Fellow at Leeds University. Ebinger commenced a lectureship post in 1991 at Leeds University, but moved to Royal Holloway University of London in 1999, where she is a Reader in Tectonics. Her research interests are in predictive models of rift basin formation, the break-up of continental lithosphere, plume-lithosphere interactions, and lithospheric rheology. Ebinger is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America, Associate Editor of Geological Society of America Bulletin, Member of the Geological Society of London Science Board and the Europe Regional Advisory Committee, American Geophysical Union.
Joined GJI Board 10 May 2001

Jean Francheteau (EGS Office)
Institut Universitaire Europeen de la Mer
UBO, Technopole Brest-Iroise
Place Nicolas Copernic 29280
Plouzane, France
Phone: + 33 2 98 49 8715
Fax: + 33 2 98 49 8760
franch@univ-brest.fr

Jean Francheteau is a marine geophysicist who obtained his PhD in oceanography in 1970 at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California, after obtaining a diploma of mining engineering at the Ecole Nationale Superieure de la Metallurgie et de 1Industrie des Mines de Nancy, France. After 11 years of research as a scientist at the Centre National pour Iexploitation des Oceans (CNEXO) in Brest, France, and about the same time as a physicist at the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, he took up his current position as a professor of geophysics at the Universit¨¦ de Bretagne Occidentale in Brest. His research has covered a wide range of topics: palaeomagnetism, heat flow, plate kinematics, marine geophysics, tectonics. His current research interest is in understanding the processes active in mid-ocean ridges. From 1991 to 1998 he has chaired the French national Dorsales programme, an active component of the InterRidge international initiative.
Joined GJI Board 1988

A. John Haines (UK Office)
Bullard Laboratories
Department of Earth Sciences
Cambridge University
Madingley Road
Cambridge, CB3 0EZ
United Kingdom
Phone: + 44 1223 337101
Fax: + 44 1223 360779
haines@esc.cam.ac.uk
http://www.esc.cam.ac.uk/astaff/haines

Joined GJI Board 1st September 1999

Michael Korn (DGG Office)
Institut f¨¹r Geophysik und Geologie
Universität Leipzig
Talstr.35
04103 Leipzig, Germany
Phone; + 49 341 9732803
Fax: + 49 341 9732809
mikorn@server1.rz.uni-leipzig.de

Michael Korn is a theoretical seismologist. He is Professor of Theoretical Geophysics at the University of Leipzig. His main interest is in wave propagation theory and its application to real data sets. Over the past years he has worked on numerical modelling of wavefields and on the scattering of seismic waves in small scale heterogeneous structures. More recently he became interested in the new possibilities of experiments with temporary deployments of dense mobile seismological networks.
Joined GJI Board 1998

Hans-Joachim K¨¹mpel (DGG Office)
GGA-Institut
Stilleweg 2
D-30655
Hannover
Germany
Phone: +49-(0)551-643 3496
Fax: +49-(0)551-643
kuempel@gga-hannover.de

Hans-Joachim K¨¹mpel is a geophysicist with specialisation in geohydraulics. He is Professor of Applied Geophysic at Bonn University and has experience in geophysical field techniques applied to shallow depths, including ground water prospection, archeometry, environmental aspects, natural hazards research, and deformation measurements. Following a Bachelor degree in Mathematics and Physics at Freiburg University, he moved to Kiel University, where he obtained a Diploma and Ph.D. in Geophysics. As part of his scientific education, he spent a year at Nice University, France, and held a post-doctoral scholarship at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada. His main current interest is in experimental in-situ pore pressure physics on various scales, as in the vicinity of wells, reservoirs, or when associated to seismicity in continental crust.
Joined GJI Board 2000

C. G. Langereis (EGS Office)
Paleomagnetic Laboratory Fort Hoofddijk
Faculty of Earth Sciences
Utrecht University
Budapestlaan 17
3584 CD Utrecht
The Netherlands
Phone: + 31 30 253 1668
Fax: + 31 30 253 1677
langer@geo.uu.nl

Cor Langereis is a professor in palaeomagnetism and heads the palaeomagnetic laboratory Fort Hoofddijk of the Faculty of Earth Sciences at Utrecht University since 1995. His main research interest concerns variations of the geomagnetic field at all time scales with an emphasis on their reliable (or unreliable) recording in the geological record. This includes polarity reversals and the construction of (astronomical) polarity timescales, as well as the study of short-lived phenomena such as geomagnetic excursions and secular variation. Further research interests encompass the sedimentary NRM acquisition mechanism and thus the relation between palaeomagnetism and the (palaeo)environment, while he is also strongly involved in geodynamic and tectonic applications
Joined GJI Board 2000

Stuart R.C. Malin (UK Office)
Bogazici University
Cengelkoy
P.O. Box 13
81220, Istanbul
Turkey
Phone: + 90 216 3321711
malin@boun.edu.tr

Stuart Malin is Professor of Geophysics at Bosphorus University, Istanbul, where he has worked since 1994, and is also a vlsltlng professor at the Universities of London and Cairo. His main research interest is in geomagnetism which he pursued first at the Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux (1958-1970) and then at the British Geological Survey, Herstmonceux and Edinburgh (1970-1982). He was Head of Astronomy and Navigation at the National Mantlme Museum, London from 1982 to 1988, and is currently consultant to the Rahmi M. KoC Museum, Istanbul. He handles papers on geomagnetism .
Joined GJI Board 1996

Yanick Ricard (EGS Office)
Laboratoire de Sciences de la Terre
ENS-Lyon, 46, allee dItalie
69364 LYON
Cedex 07 France
Phone: + 33 04 72 72 84 05
Fax: + 33 04 72 72 86 77
ricard@geologie.ens-lyon.fr

Yanick Ricard is a research director of the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique (CNRS). He has been working at the University of Orsay where he got is PhD and then at Ecole Normale Sup¨¦rieure of Paris. He is now the head of the laboratory of geology at Ecole Normale Sup¨¦rieure de Lyon. His research has covered a wide range of topics in geodynamics: gravity modeling, mantle convection, lithospheric deformation, rotation of the Earth, thermodynamics, tomography interpretation, mutiphase flows.
Joined GJI Board 2000

Kabir Roy-Chowdhury (UK Office)
Dept of Geophysics
Utrecht University
P.O. Box 80.021
3508 TA Utrecht
The Netherlands
Phone: + 31 30 253 5133
Fax: + 31 30 253 3486
kabir@geof.ruu.nl

Kabir Roy-Chowdhury has been a senior lecturer at the Department of Geophysics, Utrecht University, the Netherlands since 1993. He started as a research assistant at the National Geophysical Research Institute, Hyderabad, India, and later became a senior research scientist, helping to establish the Deep Seismic Sounding and the Marine Geophysics programmes there. In 1981 he joined Princeton University, New Jersey, as a member of the research staff, and became involved in the acquisition, processing and interpretation of multichannel seismic reflection data from the lower crust. From 1989 to 1992 he was a senior research geophysicist with the Atlantic Richfield Corporation, studying aspects of seismic processing and interpretation. His current research interests include high-resolution near-surface seismics and seismic investigations of the lower crust/upper mantle.
Joined GJI Board 1994

F. Sanso
Dipartamento di Ingenieria Idraulica Ambientale e del Rilevamento
Politecnico di Milano
Piazza Leonardo da Vinici
32 1-20133 Milano
Italy
iges@ipmtf4.topo.polimi.it

Joined GJI Board 2000.

Heinrich C. Soffel
Institut fur Allgemeine und Angewandte Geophysik
Universitat Munchen
Theresienstrasse 41
D-80333, Munchen
Germany
Phone: + 49 89 2394 4226
Fax: + 49 89 2394 4205
soffel@geophysik.uni-muenchen.de

Joined GJI Board 2000

Martyn Unsworth (North American Office)
Institute for Geophysical Research
Department of Physics, 545B
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
T6G 2J1
Canada
Tel: + 780 492 3041
unsworth@phys.ualberta.ca

Martyn Unsworth is a Research Associate Professor at the University of Alberta in Canada. After graduate studies at Cambridge in marine geophysics, he has held positions at the University of British Columbia and Los Alamos National Laboratory. His primary research interest is in the development and application of electromagnetic exploration methods in geophysics. He has worked on the development of numerical modelling and inversion techniques for magnetotelluric and controlled source electromagnetic data, and has also been active in the application of electromagnetic exploration techniques to solve a range of tectonic problems. In recent years this has included studies of active fault zones, mid-ocean ridges and the Tibetan Plateau. He is also interested in the application of these methods to problems in environmental geophysics.
Joined GJI Board 1998

Steven N. Ward (North American Office)
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics
University of California
Santa Cruz, CA 95064
USA
Phone: + 1 408 459 2480
Fax: + 1 408 459 2127
ward@uplift.ucsc.edu

Steven Ward is a solid earth geophysicist who, since 1984, has worked at the Institute of Tectonics, a research unit of the Univeristy of California at Santa Cruz. Steve is a theoretical seismologist by training, but he has migrated into the areas of crustal deformation and geodetic inference. Lately he has contributed to fault-based interpretations of uplifted marine terraces, computer simulations of seismicity and fault interaction, and multidisciplinary assessments of probabilistic seismic hazard.
Joined GJI Board 1992

David M. Willis (UK Office)
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
Chilton
Didcot
Oxon, OX11 0QX
United Kingdom
Phone + 44 1235 446498
Fax: + 44 1235 445848
dmw@mail.eiscat.rl.ac.uk

Joined GJI Board 1978

Managing Editor
J. Russ Evans
British Geological Survey, Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3LA, Scotland, UK
Phone: + 44 131 650 0213
Fax: + 44 131 667 1877
russ.evans@bgs.ac.uk

 


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