期刊名称:SOIL & SEDIMENT CONTAMINATION
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Soil & Sediment Contamination: an International Journal provides a direct link between the association's membership and those disciplines concerned with the technical, regulatory, and legal challenges of contaminated soils. The journal is a bi-monthly, international, peer-reviewed publication focusing on scientific and technical information, data, and critical analysis in the following areas:
¡¤ Analytical chemistry, including basic analytical problems with soil and/or sediment, product identification, development and evaluation of laboratory analytical techniques, and development and evaluation of laboratory analytical techniques and standards.
¡¤ Site assessment, including field sampling techniques and statistical design, sample handling and preparation, and assessment methodologies.
¡¤ Risk assessment issues, including health effects and hazards, exposure assessment, and risk characterization of sites and actions (remediation).
¡¤ Environmental fate, including the chemistry and physics influencing the movement and partitioning of contaminants in the soil and/or sediment.
¡¤ Risk management or the application of risk assessment information, especially during remediation.
¡¤ Environmental modeling, including the mathematical representation of contaminant movement and its relationship to real world utility.
¡¤ Regulatory programs and policies, especially numerical standards of cleanups (action levels, maximum concentration levels, and cleanup levels) and approaches/methodologies utilized by the regulatory community.
¡¤ Remediation technologies/corrective actions, including both offsite and in situ techniques, such as vacuum extraction, bioremediation, low and high thermal treatment, land treatment, solidification and encapsulation, asphalt incorporation, chemical treatment, soil washing, and vitrification.
¡¤ Legal considerations pertaining to regulatory statutes or actions, as well as those pertaining to the private sector, such as banking and real estate transactions.
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Instructions to Authors
1. General Information: The Journal of Soil Contamination provides a forum for the presentation of peer-reviewed articles focusing on scientific and technical information, data, and critical analysis as related to soil contamination. The Editorial Board particularly encourages manuscripts in the following areas: analytical soil chemistry, site assessment, environmental fate, remediation techniques, risk assessment/management, regulatory issues, and legal considerations.
All manuscripts should be addressed to: Denise Leonard, Northeast Regional Environmental Public Health Center, N344 Morrill Science Center, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, Tel: 413-545-1239; Fax: 413-545-4692; email: dleonard@schoolph.umass.edu. Please provide the names, complete addresses, telephone numbers and, where possible, email addresses of three potential reviewers for the manuscript.
Manuscripts are accepted for review with the understanding its submission for publication has been approved by all of the authors and by the institution where the work was carried out; further, that any person cited as a source of personal communications has approved such citation. Written authorization may be required at the Editor's discretion. Articles and any other materials published in the Journal of Soil Contamination represent the opinions of the authors and should not be construed to reflect the opinions of the Editors or the Publisher.
2. Preparation of Manuscripts: The entire manuscript must be typed double-spaced, (including title page, text, references, footnotes, figure legends and tables). Times Roman is the preferred typeface for printouts of manuscripts. Copies made by a clearly legible duplication process are preferred. Please send one original and two copies of your manuscript. A computer diskette (3 1/2") should be provided upon acceptance and revision. Make sure the diskette is clearly labeled with the platform (IBM or Macintosh) and word processing program. All pages should be numbered consecutively; starting with the title page and including pages containing tables and figure legends. Title page, abstract page, references and figure legends should be on separate pages. Tables, figure legends, and furnished art should be grouped together at the end of the manuscript to facilitate processing.
Authors should write in clear, concise English. The responsibility for all aspects of the manuscript preparation rests with the authors. The Editor will not undertake extensive changes or rewriting of the manuscript.
The title page should include the title, author's names and addresses, phone and fax numbers, and running head not to exceed 60 characters, including spaces.
All manuscripts should be accompanied by an abstract not to exceed 200 words as well as a list of key (indexing) terms. Three to six terms not in the title will assist indexers in cross-indexing your article. The key terms should follow the abstract.
Particular care should be used in preparing manuscripts involving mathematical expressions. Italic or boldface type should be clearly indicated, and Greek or unusual characters should be written plainly or explained by annotations. Simple fractional expressions should be written with a slant line rather than in the usual manner, so that only a single line of type is required.
3. References: Follow the "Harvard" style for all references, listing the author(s) last names and the date in parentheses in the text. In the case of multiple authors (more than three), et al. should be used after following the first author. Journal titles should be abbreviated according to the Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index, 1985. The reference list should follow the text and begin on a separate page, be double-spaced, and alphabetized. Multiple references by one author or group of authors should be placed in chronological order: Use small letters (1988a, 1988b) for references published in the same year. Examples of both text usage and reference listing are as follows:
Examples of Reference Styles
Journal articles:
Appears In Text as: (Metcalf et al., 1971)
Appears in References as: Metcalf, R.L., Sangha, G.K., and Kapoor, I.P. 1971. Ecosystem for the evaluation of pesticide biomagnification. Environ. Sci. Technol. 5, 709-713.
Document:
Appears in Text as: (USEPA, 1983)
Appears in References as: USEPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency). 1983. Health Assessment Document for Acrylonitrile. Office of Health and Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC 20460. EPA-600/8-82-007F. Final Report, October 1983.
Chapter in an edited book:
Appears in Text as: (Helleiner, 1967)
Appears in References as: Helleiner, O. 1967. The population changes of Europe from the Black Death. In: The Cambridge Economic History of Europe, Volume 4, pp. 1-200. (Rich, E.E. and Wilson, C.H., Eds.). London and New York, Cambridge Univ. Press.
4. Tables: Tables should be used only when they can present information more effectively than running text. Care should be taken to avoid any arrangement that unduly increases the size of a table, and the column heads should be made as brief as possible, using abbreviations liberally. Lines of data should not be numbered unless those numbers are needed for reference in the text. Columns should not be used to contain only one or two entries, nor should the same entry be repeated numerous times consecutively. Tables should be grouped at the end of the manuscript on separate sheets. Do not put in separate boxes on disk.
5. Figures and Graphs: Figures and graphs should be carefully prepared line drawings on plain paper or camera-ready micrographs or halftones. Symbols (open or closed circles, triangles, squares) and lettering (typewriter labeling is not acceptable) should be compatibly sized for optimum reproduction. Figures should be numbered in series on back with authors' names indicated. Figure captions should be typed double-spaced on a separate sheet. Both figures and captions should be grouped at the end of the manuscript.
It is the responsibility of the author to obtain permission to use previously published material. Permission must be obtained from the original copyright owner, which in most cases is the publisher.
Color reproduction in figures is possible, provided the author bears all incremental charges. An estimate of these charges will be given upon request. A letter acknowledging the author's willingness to defray the cost of color reproduction should accompany the revised manuscript.
6. Formulas and Equations: Empirical and structural formulas and mathematical and chemical equations should be arranged to fill adequately the width of a single or double column. Subscripts and especially superscripts should be written with care and exponents should be set up in a single line. All signs such as + - = < > should be spaced, but the components of mathematical products should not be spaced. Organic structural formulas should be submitted as copy suitable for direct photographic reproduction. Do not use structures when a simple formula will suffice. Do not use multiple lines unnecessarily. It is important in avoiding errors that all formula matter be carefully arranged and executed (preferably typewritten) with special attention to correctness of symbols, location of subscripts, superscripts, and electric charges, and the placing and close join-up of single and multiple bond lines. Use a copy of the structure in the text at the point of proper citation, but when originals are provided, group these at the end of the manuscript. All furnished art must be complete. Compound numbers and other material to appear in the copy should be lettered, not typewritten. This material will not be added to original art.
7. Reprints: Forms and instructions for ordering reprints will be included with the galley proofs sent to authors (by CRC Press) three to four week prior to the press time of their manuscript.
Manuscripts will be considered that address any of the wide range of issues associated with soil contamination. Examples of the types of manuscripts encouraged for submittal include:
Original data on relevant topics (e.g. related in some manner to soil and/or sediment contamination)
Case studies
Commentaries
Technical debates
Editorials
Editorial Board
Editors-in-Chief
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James Dragun, Ph.D. Dragun Corporation Farmington Hills, MI |
Paul T. Kostecki, Ph.D. University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA |
Associate Editors
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Clifford J. Bruell, Ph.D. University of Massachusetts Lowell, MA |
John B. Gustafson, Ph.D. Equilon Enterprises LLC Houston, TX |
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Charles A. Menzie, Ph.D. Menzie • Cura & Associates, Inc. Chelmsford, MA |
Mohamed Elnabarawy, M.S. 3M Environmental Technology & Services St. Paul, MN |
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Yue Rong, Ph.D. California Env. Protection Agency Los Angeles, CA |
Editorial Board
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Nader Al-Awadhi, Ph.D. Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research Safat, Kuwait |
Bruce Bauman, Ph.D. American Petroleum Institute Washington, D.C. USA |
Marcos Bonazountas, Ph.D. National Technical University of Greece Athens, Greece |
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James Bruya, Ph.D. Friedman and Bruya, Inc. Seattle, WA USA |
Edward J. Calabrese, Ph.D. University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA USA |
Lorne Everett, Ph.D. The IT Group, Santa Barbara, CA, USA |
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Paul Flathman, RM (AAM) CTL Engineering, Inc. Columbus, OH USA |
John A. Glaser, Ph.D. US EPA National Risk Management Research Laboratory Cincinnati, OH USA |
Jenifer Heath, Ph.D. Woodward-Clyde, Inc. Denver, CO USA |
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George Hoag, Ph.D. University of Connecticut Storrs, CT USA |
Michael Huesemann, Ph.D. Battelle Pacific Northwest Laboratory Sequim, WA USA |
Hilary Inyang, Ph.D. Center for Environmental Engineering & Science Technologies University of Massachusetts |
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Paul Johnson, Ph.D. Arizona State University Tempe, AZ USA |
Dave Layton, Ph.D. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories Livermore, CA USA |
Raymond C. Loehr, Ph.D. Environmental & Water Resources Engineering University of Texas Austin, TX USA |
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Donald Mackay, Ph.D. Trent University Peterborough, ON Canada |
Gareth Owen Gowen Environmental, Ltd. Kingston, ON Canada |
Dennis Paustenbach, Ph.D. Exponent Menlo Park, CA USA |
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Mike Piotrowski, Ph.D. Matrix Remedial Technologies Monument, CO USA |
David H. Rosenblatt, Ph.D. Argonne National Laboratory Argonne, IL USA |
Krishna R. Reddy, Ph.D, PE University of Illinois Chicago, IL |
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Wade Weisman, Ph.D. Elmendorf AFB, AK, USA |
Jeffrey Wong, Ph.D. Toxic Substance Control Division California Department of Health Services Sacramento, CA USA |
Henry H. Tabak, Ph.D. US EPA National Risk Management Research Laboratory Cincinnati, OH USA |
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