期刊名称:SOLID EARTH

ISSN:1869-9510
出版频率:Irregular
出版社:COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH, BAHNHOFSALLEE 1E, GOTTINGEN, GERMANY, 37081
  出版社网址:http://publications.copernicus.org/
期刊网址:http://www.solid-earth.net/
影响因子:3.337
主题范畴:GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS
变更情况:

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



About the journal

ISSN 1869-9510
eISSN 1869-9529

Solid Earth (SE)

Executive Editors:
Darren R.
 
Gröcke
Ramon Carbonell, Paolo Papale & Fabrizio Storti


 

Open Access – Public Peer-Review & Interactive Public Discussion – Personalized Copyright under a Creative Commons License

Indexed in  Science Citation Index Expanded (Web of Science) ,  Scopus and  ADS . Included in the  Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)  as well as in the  Bodleian Library (UK) ,  Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (D)  and  Library of Congress (USA) . Long-term e-archived in  Portico and  CLOCKSS .


 

Aims and Scope

Solid Earth (SE) is an international scientific journal dedicated to the publication and discussion of multidisciplinary research on the composition, structure and dynamics of the Earth from the surface to the deep interior at all spatial and temporal scales.

The journal invites short communications, research articles, review articles and commentaries on all aspects of the Solid Earth, comprising of observational, experimental, and theoretical investigations (for details see manuscript types).

The main subject areas include geochemistry, geodesy, geodynamics, geomorphology, geophysics, magma and rock physics, magnetism, mineral physics, palaeontology, petrology, planetary science, sedimentology, seismology, soil system science, stratigraphy, structural geology, tectonophysics and volcanology (for details see journal subject areas).

Solid Earth represents the cutting edge of electronic publishing, and it encourages the use of innovative data analysis and visualization schemes and formats.

Solid Earth has an innovative two-stage publication process involving the scientific discussion forum Solid Earth Discussions (SED), which has been designed to:

  • foster scientific discussion;
  • maximise the effectiveness and transparency of scientific quality assurance;
  • enable rapid publication;
  • make scientific publications freely accessible.

In the first stage, papers that pass a rapid access peer-review are immediately published on the SED website. They are then subject to Interactive Public Discussion, during which the referees' comments (anonymous or attributed), additional short comments by other members of the scientific community (attributed) and the authors' replies are also published in SED. In the second stage, the peer-review process is completed and, if accepted, the final revised papers are published in SE. To ensure publication precedence for authors, and to provide a lasting record of scientific discussion, SED and SE are both ISSN-registered, permanently archived and fully citable.


 

Issuing Body

Solid Earth (SE) and Solid Earth Discussions (SED) are published by the Copernicus GmbH (Copernicus Publications) on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU).

SE
ISSN 1869-9510
eISSN 1869-9529
http://www.solid-earth.net

SED
eISSN 1869-9537
http://www.solid-earth-discuss.net

 

Journal Subject Areas

The journal subject areas are defined by the following index terms below. These terms represent the keywords to be chosen for assignment of submitted manuscripts to individual editors.

  • Geochemistry;
  • Geodesy;
  • Geodynamics;
  • Geomorphology;
  • Geophysics;
  • Magma and Rock Physics;
  • Magnetism;
  • Mineral Physics;
  • Palaeontology;
  • Petrology;
  • Planetary Science;
  • Sedimentology;
  • Seismology;
  • Soil System Science;
  • Stratigraphy;
  • Structural Geology;
  • Tectonophysics;
  • Volcanology.

 


Instructions to Authors

General Terms

While Copernicus Publications and the European Geosciences Union welcome any original scientific work for publication, we expect that:

  • the work submitted for publication has not been published before, except in the form of an abstract or proceedings-type publication (including electronic preprints and discussion papers), or as part of a published lecture or thesis, and that it is not under consideration for peer-reviewed publication elsewhere;
  • its publication has been approved by all author(s) and, tacitly or explicitly, by the responsible authorities and/or the institutes where the work has been carried out;
  • if and when the manuscript is accepted for peer-reviewed publication, it may be re-used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0  License but not submitted for peer-reviewed publication elsewhere;
  • the authors have secured the right to reproduce any material in his/her/their work that has already been published elsewhere;
  • the authors agree with the License and Copyright Agreement;
  • the authors agree with the Article Processing Charges valid on the date of manuscript submission (receipt of electronic files);
  • the authors agree and have obeyed the General Obligations for Authors;
  • the authors are aware that discussion papers remain permanently archived, accessible and citeable;
  • with regard to the evaluation of manuscripts, the Topical Editors and the referees will follow their guidelines as summarized in the General Obligations for Editors and the General Obligations for Referees.
  • The SE editorial board reserves the right to remove referee reports and any other comments if they contain personal insults.
  • The use of general descriptive names, trade names, trademarks, etc., in the articles of this journal, even if not specifically identified, does not imply that these names are not protected by the relevant laws and regulations.
  • While the advice and information in this journal is believed to be true and accurate at the date each article is published, neither the authors, the editors, nor Copernicus Publications can accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made. Copernicus Publications makes no warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein.

General Guidelines for Manuscripts & Submission

  • In general, contributions should be short but self-contained, concentrating on new results or techniques. The length of an article is not limited with regard to its number of pages.
  • Papers should be clear, concise, and written in English. They must conform to the organization and style of the journal with correct spelling and good sentence structure. Correct language is the responsibility of the author(s), although the Topical Editor(s) and the referees are kindly asked to help in language editing of the manuscript if necessary. However, the final version of the manuscript accepted for peer-reviewed journal publication will receive complimentary English language copy-editing.
  • Authors are kindly requested to consider the manuscript evaluation criteria of the journal to meet the quality standards and to reduce the peer-review processing time.
  • Before submission manuscripts need to be registered. This process requires author details and also a set of keywords, describing the manuscript. In return the author(s) receive a manuscript number and information on how to upload the files containing the text, figures and additional material.
  • Manuscripts (i.e. work prior to the review process) must be submitted in digital format by using the appropriate upload forms.
  • Supplementary material, such as data sets, animated visualisation, etc., should be submitted together with the manuscript for peer-reviewed publication.
  • Authors are obliged to suggest 2-5 potential referees. Ideally, suggested reviewers should be scientists who are not closely associated (i.e. at different institutes and who have not collaborated significantly in the past research) with any of the authors. Should this not be the case, please indicate this. In any case, all suggested reviewers should be able to offer fair and impartial reviews of the material being submitted.

Manuscript Types

  • Research Articles report substantial advances in the scientific understanding of the Solid Earth within the scope of the journal.
  • Short Communications report particularly concise and innovative/controversial perspectives on Solid Earth science.
  • Review Articles summarise the status of knowledge and outline future directions of research within the scope of the journal. Before preparing and submitting a review article, please contact an editor covering the relevant subject area and an executive editor.
  • Peer-reviewed Comments continue the discussion of preceding papers beyond the limits of immediate interactive discussion. They may be longer and submitted later than the comments exchanged in the Interactive Public Discussion of papers in SED. They undergo the same process of peer-review, publication and interactive discussion as articles and technical notes, and they are equivalent to the peer-reviewed comments in traditional scientific journals. The manuscript title should start with "Comment on" or "Reply to".
  • Corrigenda correct errors in preceding papers. The manuscript title is: Corrigendum to "TITLE" published in JOURNAL, VOLUME, PAGES, YEAR. Please note that Corrigenda are only possible for final revised journal papers and not for the corresponding Discussion Paper.

Supplementary Material

For all manuscript types, supplementary material, such as data sets, highly detailed and specific technical information such as computer programme code, animated visualisation, user manuals, maps, very large images, etc., should be submitted together with the manuscript for peer-reviewed publication for inclusion as electronic supplements (for details see Manuscript Preparation).

The supplementary material shall contain only complementary information but no scientific interpretations or findings/messages that would go beyond the contents of the manuscript.

Please also note the following

  • Manuscripts should be as concise as possible but not at the expense of scientific accuracy and completeness. To promote scientific conciseness and completeness at the same time, the inclusion of a comprehensive abstract is encouraged. There are no specific page limits and there is no special manuscript category for accelerated publication since the process of peer-review and publication in SED and SE is inherently efficient and rapid.
  • Manuscripts have to be written in English, and authors are responsible for correct spelling and grammar. Moreover some General Obligations for Authors have to be considered.
  • For more information about the evaluation of manuscripts see: Review Process and MS Evaluation Criteria.

Manuscript Composition

For the review process a *.pdf file of the complete manuscript is required and the pages should be placed in the following order: title page, abstract, text, appendices, acknowledgements, references, tables and figure captions. All pages should be numbered consecutively and, if possible, line numbers should be included.

  • Title Page: Title (concise but informative), author initials and last names, full institutional addresses of all authors, correspondence email for proofs.
  • Abstract: The abstract should be intelligible to the general reader without reference to the text. After a brief introduction of the topic, the summary recapitulates the key points of the article and mentions possible directions for prospective research. Reference citations should not be included in this section, unless urgently required, and abbreviations should not be included without explanations.
  • Sections: The headings of all sections, including introduction, results, discussions or summary must be numbered. Three levels of sectioning are allowed, e.g. 3, 3.1 and 3.1.1.
  • Footnotes: These should be avoided, as they tend to disrupt the flow of the text. If absolutely necessary, they should be numbered consecutively. Footnotes to tables should be marked by lowercase letters.
  • Appendices: These should be labelled with capital letters: Appendix A, Appendix B etc. Equations, figures and tables should be numbered as (A1), Fig B5 or Table C6, respectively.
  • Figures: Images should be labelled in consecutive Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3,). For the production of the accepted manuscript they should be submitted as separate files in *.pdf, *.ps, *.eps, *.jpg, *.png, *.tif, or *.gif format with a resolution of not less than 150-300 dpi. Composite figures containing multiple panels should be collected into one file before submission. However, in instances where figures are in portrait orientation with a small aspect ratio, it is recommended that the authors provide all subfigures as individual files to allow a splitting. Photographs and images must be saved in *.jpg, *.png, *.tif, or *.gif format, ideally converted into high-quality *.pdf, with a resolution of not less than 150-300 dpi. A legend should clarify all symbols used and should appear in the figure itself, rather than verbal explanations in the caption (e.g. "dashed line" or "open green circles").
  • Figure captions: Each illustration should have a concise but descriptive caption. The abbreviations used in the figure must be defined, unless they are common abbreviations or have already been defined in the text. Figure captions should be included in the text file and not in the figure files.
  • Tables: Any tables should appear on separate sheets after the references and should be numbered sequentially with Arabic numerals. For the production of the accepted manuscript, they should be submitted as MS WORD or included in the LaTeX file. Tables submitted as a PDF or an image file cannot be processed. Tables should be self-explanatory and include a concise, yet sufficiently descriptive caption. Horizontal lines should normally only appear above and below the table, and as a separator between the head and the main body of the table. Vertical lines must be avoided.
  • Supplementary Material: Authors have the opportunity to submit supplementary material with their manuscript, such as data sets, movies, animations, etc. These files will be published online along with the article as *.zip archive (or single *.pdf file). The overall file size of a supplement is limited to 50 MB. Authors of larger supplements are kindly asked to submit their files to a reliable data repository and to insert a link in the manuscript. Ideally, this linkage is realized through DOIs (digital object identifier).
  • File Size: Authors are kindly asked to find the best balance between the quality of figures and submitted material on the one hand, and a managable file size on the other hand. Individual figures should not exceed 5 MB, and the overall size of all submitted files, excluding supplements, should not exceed 30 MB.
  • Evaluation Criteria: While preparing their manuscript, authors are kindly requested to consider the manuscript evaluation criteria to meet the quality standards and to reduce the peer-review processing time.

References

Papers should make proper and sufficient reference to the relevant formal literature. Informal or so-called "grey" literature may only be referred to if there is no alternative from the formal literature. Works cited in a manuscript should be accepted for publication or published already. These references have to be listed alphabetically at the end of the manuscript under the first author's name. Works "submitted to", "in preparation", "in review", or only available as preprint should also be included in the reference list. Please do not use bold or italic writing for in-text citations or in the reference list.

Please supply the full author list with last name followed by initials. After the list of authors, the complete reference title needs to be named. Journal names are abbreviated according to the ISI Journal Title Abbreviations Index , followed by the volume number, the complete page numbers (first and last page) and the publication year. If the abbreviation of a journal name is not known, please use the full title. In addition to journal articles, all reference types are summarized together with examples in the Copernicus Publications Reference Types  list.

If there is more than one work by the same first author, his/her papers are listed in the following order: (1) single author papers (first author), followed by (2) co-author papers (first author and second author), and finally (3) team papers (first author et al.). Within these three categories the respective papers are then listed as follows:

  • Single author papers: chronologically, beginning with the oldest. If there is more than one paper in the same year, a letter (a, b, c) is added to the year, both in the in-text citation as well as in the reference list.
  • Co-author papers: first alphabetically according to the second author's last name, and then chronologically within each set of co-authors. If there is more than one paper in the same year per set of co-authors, a letter (a, b, c) is added to the year both in the in-text citation as well as in the reference list.
  • Team papers: first chronologically (beginning with the oldest), independent of the team author names, then alphabetically within each year according to the second (third, etc.) author. If there is more than one paper in the same year for a first author (independent of the team), a letter (a, b, c) is added to the year both in the in-text citation as well as in the reference list.

In terms of in-text citations, the order can be based on relevance, as well as chronological or alphabetical listing, depending on the author's preference.

Examples for Reference Sorting

In general, in-text citations can be displayed as "[…] Smith (2009) […]", or "[…] (Smith, 2009) […]".

Reference List Short Citation
Single author: chronologically
Smith, P.: …, 2009. Smith, 2009
Smith, P.: …, 2010a. Smith, 2010a
Smith, P.: …, 2010b. Smith, 2010b
Co-authors: alphabetically before chronologically
Smith, P. and Brown, P.: …, 2010. Smith and Brown, 2010
Smith, P. and Carter, T.: …, 2007. Smith and Carter, 2007
Smith, P. and Carter, T.: …, 2010a. Smith and Carter, 2010a
Smith, P. and Carter, T.: …, 2010b. Smith and Carter, 2010b
Smith, P. and Thomson, A.: …, 2005. Smith and Thomson, 2005
Team: chronologically before alphabetically
Smith, P., Thomson, A., and Carter, T.: …, 2006. Smith et al., 2006
Smith, P., Carter, T., and Hanson, M. B.: …, 2008a. Smith et al., 2008a
Smith, P., Carter, T., and Walter, N.: …, 2008b. Smith et al., 2008b
Smith, P., Carter, T., and Hanson, M. B.: …, 2009. Smith et al., 2009
Smith, P., Brown, P., and Walter, N.: …, 2010. Smith et al., 2010

Please do not use bold or italic writing in the reference list or for in-text citations.

Downloads

Textual and Visual Conventions

  • Mathematical Symbols and Formulae: In general, mathematical symbols are typeset in italics. The most notable exceptions are function names (e.g. sin, cos), chemical formulas and physical units, which are all typeset with the normal (upright) font. Matrices are printed in bold face, and vectors in bold face italics. A range of numbers should be specified as "a to b" or "a...b". The expression "a–b" is only acceptable in cases where no confusion with "a minus b" is possible.
  • Equations: These should be numbered sequentially with Arabic numerals in parentheses on the right-hand side, i.e. (1), (2), etc. If too long, split them accordingly. If there are chemical formulae included, i.e. reactions, please number them (R1), (R2), etc. When using WORD, the equation editor and not the graphic mode should be used under all circumstances.
  • Units: The metric system is mandatory and, wherever possible, SI units should be used. Also units should be displayed using exponential rather then potential formatting.
  • Date and Time: 25 July 2007 (dd month yyyy), 15:17:02 (hh:mm:ss). Often it is necessary to specify the time if referring to local time or Universal Time Coordinated. This can be done by adding "LT" or "UTC", respectively.
  • Abbreviations and Acronyms: Equations should be referred to by the abbreviation "Eq." and the respective number in parentheses, e.g. "Eq. (14)". However, when the reference comes at the beginning of a sentence, the unabbreviated word "Equation" should be used, e.g.: "Equation (14) is very important for the results; however, Eq. (15) makes it clear that..." The abbreviations "Sect." and "Fig." should be used when they appear in running text and should be followed by a number unless they come at the beginning of a sentence, e.g.: "The results are depicted in Fig. 5. Figure 9 reveals that..." If acronyms or abbreviations are used throughout the article, they should be defined at first occurrence, e.g.: leaf area index (LAI), National Research Foundation (NRF). If these names or concepts are also mentioned in the abstract, they should be defined there as well.
  • Capitalization: In addition to proper nouns, capitalization of the first letter is applied for titles, section headings, figure and table captions but only for the first word. Abbreviations and expressions in the text such as Chap(s)., Fig(s)., Table(s), Eq(s)., Sect(s)., Paper, Theorem, etc. should always be capitalized when used with numbers, e.g., Fig. 3, Table 1, Paper III, Sect 2. The words figure(s), table(s), equation(s), theorem(s) in the text should not be capitalized when used without an accompanying number.
  • Non-English Words and Phrases: Foreign words that have not come into general use are italicized. Words, phrases and abbreviations referenced in the Webster's are not italicized. For example, et al., cf., e.g., a priori, in situ, bremsstrahlung, and eigenvalue should not be italicized or hyphenated.

Manuscript Submission

First Steps

Before the actual submission of a manuscript to the Editorial Support for peer-review, you are kindly requested:

File Submission for Review Process

After the manuscript registration, you are kindly asked to upload those files which are necessary for the peer-review process. These are at least:

  • The abstract (title, authors, affiliations, abstract text, sample ) as *.pdf file;
  • The complete manuscript (abstract, text, tables, figures) as *.pdf file.

Other possible review files are:

  • Any supplementary material (if available) as *.zip archive or single *.pdf file. The overall file size of a supplement is limited to 50 MB. Authors of larger supplements are kindly asked to submit their files to a reliable data repository and to insert a link in the manuscript. Ideally, this linkage is realized through DOIs (digital object identifier);
  • The author's response, in case of "minor" or "major" revisions requested by the editor, as a separate *.pdf file. It should include a point-by-point response (indicating page and line numbers) to the reviews and other relevant comments (this can be copied from the Interactive Public Discussion) and a list of all relevant changes made in the manuscript.

File Submission for Production Process

After the acceptance of a manuscript, you will be informed by email and are kindly asked to complete the file upload for the publication production process. Then, please submit the following files:

  • The actual text followed by the table(s) and figure caption(s) prepared in the way as outlined in the Manuscript Preparation as one file in LaTeX (as *.tex file) or MS WORD format (as *.doc file);
  • All figures, numbered e.g. f01, f02, ..., f11, f01a, f01b, and prepared in the way as outlined in the Manuscript Preparation, as one *.zip archive (or other compressed formats). Possible figure formats are *.pdf, *.ps, *.eps, *.jpg, *.png, *.tif, and *.gif.

Remark on File Sizes

Authors are kindly asked to find the best balance between good quality of figures and submitted material on the one hand, and to keep the overall file size limited on the other hand. Individual figures should not exceed 5 MB, and the overall size of all submitted files excluding supplements should not exceed 30 MB.


Editorial Board

Executive Editors

Darren R.
Gröcke
(Chief-Executive Editor)
d.r.grocke@durham.ac.uk
Durham University, Earth Sciences
South Road
Durham DH1 3LE
United Kingdom


Ramon
Carbonell
ramon.carbonell@csic.es
CSIC-ICTJA: Institut de Ciències de la Terra Jaume Almera, Estructura i Dinàmica de la Terra
Spain


Paolo
Papale
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Pisa
Italy


Fabrizio
Storti
fabrizio.storti@unipr.it
Università degli Studi di Parma, Dipartimento di Fisica e Scienze della Terra
Campus Universitario - Parco Area delle Scienze 157/A
I-43124 Parma
Italy



Topical Editors

Juan Carlos
Afonso
juan.afonso@mq.edu.au
Macquarie University, GEMOC ARC National Key Centre, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Australia


Patrick
Allard
pallard@ipgp.fr
CNRS-IPGP, Géologie des Systèmes Volcaniques
1 rue Jussieu
B468
75238 PARIS
France


Nicholas T.
Arndt
nicholas.arndt@ujf-grenoble.fr
Université Joseph Fourier
BP 53
38041 Grenoble cedex 09
France


Irina
Artemieva
irina@geo.ku.dk
University of Copenhagen, Geology Section, IGN
Oester Voldgade 10
DK-1350 Copenhagen
Denmark


Costanza
Bonadonna
costanza.bonadonna@unige.ch
Université de Genève, Section des sciences de la Terre et de l'environnement
13, rue des Maraîchers
CH-1205 Genève
Switzerland


Doris
Breuer
doris.breuer@dlr.de
German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute for Planetary Research
Rutherfordstrasse 2
12489 Berlin
Germany


Michael
Burton
burton@pi.ingv.it
INGV
Via della Faggiola, 32
56126 Pisa
Italy


Artemi
Cerdà
artemio.cerda@uv.es
University of Valencia, Department of Geography, Soil Erosion and Degradation Research Group
Blasco Ibàñez, 10
46010 Valencia
Spain


Donald B.
Dingwell
dingwell@lmu.de
University of Munich, Earth and Environmental Sciences
Theresienstr. 41
80333 Munich
Germany


Francesca
Funiciello
ffunicie@uniroma3.it
Universita', Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche
Largo S.Leonardo Murialdo 1
00146 Roma
Italy


Karl
Föllmi
karl.foellmi@unil.ch
Université de Lausanne, Institut de Géologie et Paléontologie
Switzerland


Carmen
Gaina
carmen.gaina@geo.uio.no
University of Oslo, Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics CoE, Department of Geosciences
Norway


Albert
Galy
University of Cambridge, Department of Earth Sciences
United Kingdom


Wolfram
Geissler
wolfram.geissler@awi.de
Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Geophysics
Germany


Taras
Gerya
taras.gerya@erdw.ethz.ch
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Department of Earth Sciences
Switzerland


Yves
Gueguen
gueguen@mailhost.geologie.ens.fr
Ecole Normale Superieure, Geosciences
24, rue Lhomond
75231 Paris Cedex 05
France


Michael
Heap
heap@unistra.fr
EOST, Université de Strasbourg, EOST
France


Klaus
Holliger
klaus.holliger@unil.ch
University of Lausanne, Institute of Geophysics
Amphipole Building
CH-1015 Lausanne
Switzerland


Heiner
Igel
igel@geophysik.uni-muenchen.de
University of Munich, Earth an Environmental Sciences
Theresienstrasse 41
80333 Munich
Germany


Takaya
Iwasaki
iwasaki@eri.u-tokyo.ac.jp
The University of Tokyo, Earthquake Research Institute
Japan


Christopher A.
Jones
cajones@maths.leeds.ac.uk
University of Leeds, School of Mathematics
Woodhouse Lane
Leeds LS2 9JT
United Kingdom


Antonio
Jordán
ajordan@us.es
Universidad de Sevilla, Facultad de Química, Cristalografía, Mineralogía y Química Agrícola
Profesor García González, 1
Sevilla
41012 Sevilla
Spain


Christopher
Juhlin
christopher.juhlin@geo.uu.se
Uppsala University, Department of Earth Sciences
Sweden


Rainer
Kind
kind@gfz-potsdam.de
GFZ Potsdam
Telegrafenberg
14473 Potsdam
Germany


Ivan
Koulakov
koulakoviy@ipgg.nsc.ru
Institute of Petroleum Geology and Geophysics
Prospekt Koptyuga 3
630090 Novosibirsk
Russian Federation


CharLotte
Krawczyk
lotte@liag-hannover.de
Leibniz Institute for Applied Geophysics (LIAG)
Stilleweg 2
D-30655 Hannover
Germany


Ilmo T.
Kukkonen
Geological Survey of Finland
Finland


Yan
Lavallee
University of Liverpool, Geology and Geophysics
United Kingdom


Vincent
Lesur
lesur@gfz-potsdam.de
GFZ-Potsdam, Physics of the Earth
Germany


Alan
Levander
Rice University, Earth Science
United States


Kaijian
Liu
Rice University, Earth Science
United States


Antonella
Longo
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Pisa
Italy


Giovanni
Macedonio
macedon@ov.ingv.it
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Osservatorio Vesuviano
Via Diocleziano 328
80124 Napoli
Italy


Mioara
Mandea
CNES, Directorate for Strategy and Programmes
2, Place Maurice Quentin
75039 Paris
France


Roberto
Moretti
moretti@ov.ingv.it
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Osservatorio Vesuviano
Via Diocleziano 328
80124 Naples
Italy


Nicole
Métrich
metrich@ipgp.fr
Institut de Physique du Globe, Géologie des Systèmes Volcaniques
1 rue Jussieu
75005 Paris
France


David
Naar
naar@usf.edu
University of South Florida, College of Marine Science
140 7th Avenue South
FL
St. Petersburg 33701-5016
United States


Paulo
Pereira
paulo@mruni.eu
Mykolas Romeris University, Department of Environmental Policy
Ateitis, 20
Vilnius
Vilnius
Lithuania


Marta
Perez-Gussinye
Royal Holloway, University of London, Earth Sciences
United Kingdom


Jaroslava
Plomerova
jpl@ig.cas.cz
Institue of Geophysics, Academy of Sciences, Prague, Seismology
Czech Republic


József
Pálfy
palfy@nhmus.hu
Hungarian Natural History Museum, Department of Paleontology and Geology
Baross utca 13
1088 Budapest
Hungary


John
Quinton
j.quinton@lancaster.ac.uk
Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Bailrigg
Lancaster LA1 4YQ
United Kingdom


Ruth
Robinson
University of St Andrews, Earth & Environmental Sciences
North Street
FIfe
St Andrews Ky16 9AL
United Kingdom


Stuart
Robinson
stuart.robinson@ucl.ac.uk
University College London, Earth Sciences
Gower Street
London WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom


Fabio
Romanelli
romanel@units.it
University of Trieste, Department of Earth Sciences
Via Weiss 4
34127 Trieste
Italy


Federico
Rossetti
rossetti@uniroma3.it
Università Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche
Italy


Angelo Pio
Rossi
an.rossi@jacobs-university.de
Jacobs University Bremen
Campus Ring 1
28759 Bremen
Germany


Gilberto
Saccorotti
saccorotti@pi.ingv.it
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Pisa
Via U. della Faggiola, 32
56126 Pisa
Italy


Valenti
Sallares
vsallares@cmima.csic.es
Institute of Marine Sciences - CMIMA - CSIC, ES-Q2818002D
Spain


Piergiorgio
Scarlato
piergiorgio.scarlato@ingv.it
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Seismology and Tectonophysics
Italy


Bruce
Schaefer
Macquarie University, GGMOC, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Australia


Nathan
Sheldon
nsheldon@umich.edu
University of Michigan, Department of Geological Sciences
United States


Fabio
Speranza
fabio.speranza@ingv.it
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia
Via di Vigna Murata 605
00143 Rome
Italy


Fabio
Terribile
fabio.terribile@unina.it
Università di Napoli Federico II, Department of Soil, Plant, Environment and Animal Production Sciences
Italy


Nicolas
Thouveny
thouveny@cerege.fr
CEREGE- Aix-Marseille Université - CNRS, Physics and Structures
Europole de l'Arbois, BP 80
13545 Aix en Provence cedex 04
France


Hans
Thybo
thybo@geo.ku.dk
University of Copenhagen, Department of Geosciences and Natural Ressources, Geology
Oester Voldgade 10
DK-1350 Copenhagen K
Denmark


Douwe J. J.
van Hinsbergen
douwework@gmail.com
University of Oslo, Physics of Geological Processes
Sem Sælands vei 24
0316 Oslo
Norway


Jeroen
van Hunen
Durham University, Earth Sciences
Science Site
Durham DH1 3LE
United Kingdom


Stephanie C.
Werner
University of Oslo, Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics
Norway


Gary
Wilson
University of Otago, Department of Marine Science
New Zealand


Rinus
Wortel
Utrecht University, Faculty of Earth Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences
Netherlands


Shuhai
Xiao
xiao@vt.edu
Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Geosciences
United States


Kate
Zeigler
zeiglergeo@gmail.com
Zeigler Geologic Consulting
United States


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