期刊名称:ARCHEOSCIENCES-REVUE D ARCHEOMETRIE

ISSN:1960-1360
出版频率:Semi-annual
出版社:PRESSES UNIV RENNES, CAMPUS LA HARPE, 2 RUE DU DOYEN-DENIS-LEROY, RENNES CEDEX, FRANCE, 35044
  出版社网址:http://www.pur-editions.fr/
期刊网址:http://archeosciences.revues.org/?lang=en
影响因子:0.086
主题范畴:CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL;    GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
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

Couverture Archeosciences 38

Electronic ISSN 2104-3728

ArchéoSciences, revue d'archéométrie, is published yearly by the GMPCA (Groupe des méthodes pluridisciplinaires contribuant à l’archéologie). It features articles, in French or English, and original, unpublished research focussing on the application of a diverse range of scientific techniques (physics, chemistry, maths, earth and life sciences) in the resolution of archaeological problems or the refinement of new methods. Articles may relate to methodologies and their limits, and fundamental scientific research or specialised techniques, as long as they have a clear, explicit bearing on archaeology.

 


Instructions to Authors

Manuscripts

  • Research paper : Research reports of broad scope that are original contributions to science : manuscript of about 20 pages with double spacing or 40 000 characters with a maximum of 6-8 figures.

  • Note or brief contribution : Brief contribution of new observations or of important findings that deserve publication before broader studies are completed : manuscript of about 8 pages with double spacing or 11 000 characters with 3-4 figures.

  • Book review : Critical appraisal of broad areas of investigation or research in archaeometry : manuscript of about 2 pages with double spacing or 3 000 characters.

For the submission, send:

a letter mentioning the complete address and phone number of the author of correspondence and indicating that the submitted manuscript is not the object of an evaluation by another periodical,

Evaluation

All manuscripts are under the responsibility of an Editor and are evaluated by two scientists of known competence in the relevant field (editor or external researcher). The corresponding author will receive a letter from the Editor-in-chief with requests for revisions, if need be, in light of the reviewers' comments and recommendations.

Authors are allowed a maximum of 1 month to submit a revised version (with maximum 5 reminders each 14 days). When submitting a revised version, authors must justify the changes they made in a letter accompanying three standard copies and an electronic version of the manuscript.

Reviewers are allowed a maximum of 21 days to submit a corrected version (with maximum 6 reminders each 21 days).

Throughout the evaluation process, e-mail will be used as often as possible to speed up the process.

Manuscript preparation

Upon acceptance of the manuscript for publication, authors will be requested to provide an electronic version of their text, indicating the word-processing software, for PC or Macintosh. Hard copy and electronic copy must be identical.

General

The researchers are invited to subject their manuscript in French or in English.

Presentation of the manuscript must conform to this present guide. The text must be type written, double-spaced, on one side of white paper, 21 cm x 29.7 cm or A4 format, with margins at least 2.5 cm wide. All pages should be numbered, including the title page. Authors' name(s) should appear in the upper left corner on each page, followed by a condensed running title describing the article.

Capital letters should be used for the first letter of words only where relevant. Sub-titles, where essential, must be brief.

Authors are responsible for consistency and accuracy in spelling of Latin words and specialized terms.

It is advised to limit the number of levels of subtitles for two or three. It is advised to use the international standard for crossheads: 1. 1.1. 1.1.1. 2, etc.

The common nouns of plants or animals must be written in small letters. The names of period will carry a capital letter: Neolithic, Bronze Age, etc.

Units and symbols

Abbreviations, symbols, units and nomenclature must conform to the international codes for various disciplines. If units or particular symbols must be used, they must be defined during the first mention in the text.

Numbers

The numbers from zero up nine will be written in letters, except if they are used in a formula or with a unit. Arabic numerals will always be preferred.

Statistics

The use of the standard statistical symbols (c2, n, P) is required.

Organization

Manuscript should be presented as follows: title page, abstract and keywords, text, acknowledgements, literature cited, tables, and figures.

Title page

The title must be concise and representative of the content. Expressions such as "Contribution to..." or "Study of..." should be avoided. Authors should appear in the definitive order of publication, with the address of everyone at the time of the study.

Abstract

Authors must submit an abstract in English and in French. The abstract should have about 200 words and should be as precise as possible. Present it in one paragraph and do not use abbreviations.

Keywords

Up to six keywords in English and in French in alphabetical order and separated by comas should follow the abstract.

Introduction

Limit the introduction to the scope, purpose and rationale of the study, the definition of the problems and the reasons for or perspective of the work. A brief literature review should give only the guideposts to guide the reader and place the study within a more general context.

Methods

The "Methods" section describes the framework needed to answer the questions raised in the purpose of the work. Limit the information to what is necessary for judging whether the findings are valid.

Results

The results should be presented as comprehensively as possible while keeping in mind to answer only the questions raised in the purpose of the work. Whenever possible, findings should be exposed following the logical sequence of the study and methods, so as to avoid repeating information that should be clearly presented in tables and figures.

Discussion - Conclusion

The discussion should focus on the main contributions of the study, interpreting the findings, and comparing them to other studies. The discussion is a synthesis, an interpretation, exposed in broadly applicable generalizations and principles. In addition, the way in which the findings agree or contrast with other published work should be expressed. The scope, significance, and general conclusions of the study should end the discussion.

Acknowledgements

Authors should acknowledge only people (or organizations) who have substantially contributed to the scientific and technical aspects of the research, granted financial support, or helped improve the quality of the manuscript.

Literature cited

Authors are responsible for the accuracy of all elements appearing in the "Literature cited" section. References should be cited in the text by the name of the author and the year of publication. For instance, a text by D. M. Martin and H. W. Mann published in 1999 would be cited as: Martin & Mann (1999) or (Martin & Mann,1999) depending on sentence construction. Consecutive citations must be separated by a semicolon. The phrase "et al." should be used only when there are more than two authors.

In the bibliography, all references should be listed alphabetically according to the first author's name. Those in a given year with the same author(s) must be chronologically indentified by a, b, c, etc. Authors must ensure that references cited "in press" have been accepted for publication. All the names of journals or publishing organizations must be written in full.

  • Journal articles
    Martin, S., Durand, J.-C., 1995. Chemical composition of some Medieval glass fragments from Central France. Revue d’Archéométrie, 27 : 20-27.
    Smith, J. H., 2000. Fission track dating of the obsidian of Paros Island. Bulletin of Mineralogy, Serie B, 30, (4): 285-297.

  • Book
    Dulac, D., 1993. Les Fouilles du bourg Saint-Jean à Rennes (France). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

  • Chapter in book
    Camel, Ph., 1990. La métallurgie des non-ferreux au Moyen Age. In E. Gwinner (dir.). La Bourgogne des origines. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 413-421.

  • PhD
    Laurel, L., 1997. Les hommes et le climat en Europe du sud au tardiglaciaire. Thèse de doctorat, Université de Paris X, France.

  • Report
    Buitel, J.-M., 1999. Atlas des zones humides du Labrador. Ministère de l'Énergie et des Ressources, Direction générale de l'exploration géologique, Québec.

  • Papers in conference proceedings
    Davidson, N. C., Conrad, P. R., 1988. Determination of Organic Matter in Calcereous Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks by Loss on Ignition. In H. Ouellet, H. G. Smith (ed.). Acta XIX International Congress of Archaeology. Volume I. University of Cambridge Press, Cambridge, 342-352.

  • Internet reference Zepp, C. E., 2000. An on-line radiocarbon calibration tool. De http://www.xxx, consulté en mois/année.

Tableaux - Figures - Equations

All tables should be numbered with Roman numerals, following the order they are cited in the text.

Figures should be numbered with Arabic numerals. The maximum finished size of a one-column illustration is 8 x 24.5 cm or that of a two-column illustration is 17 x 24.5 cm.

The title of tables and figures must be concise and clear.

When submitted on disk, figures prepared on computer should be included in separate files. The asked formats are EPS or TIFF. Please indicate clearly software and version used.

When submitted on paper, the name of the first author and manuscript number should appear on the reverse side of each figure. It is essential to provide the best quality copy of all illustrative material to ensure proper reproduction if scanning of some figures is needed.

Black and white photographs should be well contrasted and very clear. Colour figures are accepted.

Geographic coordinates and scale should always appear on maps.

Each equation should be identified by number in parenthese placed flush with the right margin. In the case of particularly long equations that may run on two lines once set, indicate where the cut should be made.

Proofs and reprints

The author for correspondence will receive 10 free reprints.

After acceptance of the manuscript and type setting, the author for correspondence will receive the proofs for verification in a PDF format. At this stage, it is strongly recommended to read the article very carefully and to report any corrections to be made. It is the final stage before publication and no additional change can be made afterwards. Proofs must be returned promptly within one week following receipt. Corrections that imply major changes compared to the accepted version will be not accepted or will be charged in the authors.

Transfer of rights

From the publication of the manuscript, the author will give up his rights for the publisher.

Cover photographs

Authors whose manuscript has been accepted for publication are invited to submit colour photographs for publication on the cover. Colour slides or digital photographs representing a particular aspect of the paper to be published are welcome. Please note that authors will receive no compensation in the event that their photoghaph is chosen.

Digital photographs need to be at least at a 300 dpi resolution.


Editorial Board

Articles

Articles include original research papers, brief contributions and book reviews.

  • Research paper : Research reports of broad scope that are original contributions to science.

  • Note or brief contribution : Brief contribution of new observations or of important findings that deserve publication before broader studies are completed.

  • Book review : Critical appraisal of broad areas of investigation or research in archaeometry.

Committees

Each manuscript is submitted to two referees chosed by the Reading Committee composed by the Scientific committee and the Editor committee, each composed with the following personnalities

Editor committe

Editors in chief

Philippe Lanos (rédacteur en chef, trésorier), chercheur au CNRS, laboratoire d'archéomagnétisme, CRPAA, institut de recherche sur les ArchéoMATériaux (IRAMAT, UMR 5060).
Archaeomagnetism and geomagnetic secular variation, rock magnetism, dating of baked clay, statistics, chronological modelling.
Géosciences- Rennes (UMR 6118), Bât. 15, campus scientifique de Beaulieu,
CS 74205,
université Rennes 1
avenue du Général-Leclerc, F-35042 Rennes Cedex
Tel. +33 (0)2 23 23 56 39 / Fax +33 (0)2 23 23 60 90 / philippe.lanos@univ-rennes1.fr

Editors

Ludovic Bellot-Gurlet, maître de conférences à l’UPMC, laboratoire MONARIS : de la molécule aux nano-objets : réactivité, interactions et spectroscopies (UMR 8233).
Physico-chemistry of Cultural Heritage materials
UPMC université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie — Paris 6, case courrier 49
4 place Jussieu, 75252 Paris Cedex 05
Tel. 01 44 27 36 18 / ludovic.bellot-gurlet@upmc.fr

Emmanuelle Delqué-Kolic, ingénieur de recherche au CNRS, laboratoire de mesure du carbone 14 (LMC14, UMS 2572)
Radiocarbon dating, chronology

UMS 2572 du CNRS, CEA de Saclay, bâtiment 450, porte 4E
F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette
Tel. +33 (0)1 69 08 14 54 / Fax +33 (0)1 69 08 15 57 / emmanuelle.delque-kolic@cea.fr

Estelle Herrscher, chercheur au CNRS, laboratoire méditerranéen de Préhistoire Europe Afrique, LAMPEA (UMR 7269)
Biological Anthropology, Stable isotopes, Dietary behaviors from Neolithic to Proto-History in Europe and Pacific area
MMSH, BP 647
5 rue du Château-de-l'Horloge, 13094 Aix-en-Provence Cedex 2
Tel. +33 (0) 442 52 42 94 / herrscher@mmsh.univ-aix.fr

Matthieu Le Bailly, maitre de conférences à l’université Besançon, laboratoire Chrono-environnement (UMR 6249)
Palaeoparasitology, parasitic disease history, host/parasite relationship.

Université de Franche-Comté - UFR sciences et techniques
16, route de Gray, 25030 Besançon Cedex
Tél : +33 (0)3 81 66 57 25 / matthieu.lebailly@univ-fcomte.fr

François-Xavier Le-Bourdonnec (secrétaire), maitre de conférences à l’université Bordeaux Montaigne, centre de recherche en Physique appliquée à l'archéologie (CRPAA), institut de recherche sur les ArchéoMATériaux (IRAMAT, UMR 5060)
Circulation and economy of prehistoric lithic raw materials. Relation to technology systems / socio-economic structures. Development of methods for mainly non-destructive suitable physico-chemical analyses.
Université Bordeaux Montaigne, maison de l'Archéologie
F-33607 Pessac Cedex
Tel. +33 (0)5 57 12 47 89 / Fax +33 (0)5 57 12 45 50 / francois-xavier.le-bourdonnec@u-bordeaux3.fr

Joséphine Lesur, maitre de conférences au MNHN, laboratoire Archéozoologie, archéobotanique : sociétés, pratiques et environnements (UMR 7209)
Neolithisation in North-East Africa; evolution of animal diversity, animal use, consumption and craft in the Horn of Africa during the Holocene.
Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, case postale 55
55 rue Buffon, F-75005 Paris
Tel. +33 (0)1 40 79 56 17 / Fax +33 (0)1 40 79 57 22 / jolesur@mnhn.fr

Ina Reiche, chercheur au CNRS, laboratoire d’Archéologie moléculaire et structurale (LAMS, UMR 8220)
Archaeometry of historical and archaeological biomaterials (bone, ivory, antler, cave sites) as well as pigments and minerals.
Palais du Louvre, porte des Lions
14 quai François-Mitterrand, F-75001 Paris
Tel. +33 (0)1 40 20 56 51 / ina.reiche@culture.gouv.fr

Sylvain Bauvais, chercheur au CNRS, Laboratoire « Métallurgies et Cultures », Institut de Recherche sur les ArchéoMATériaux (IRAMAT, UMR 5060, CNRS) et Laboratoire « Archéomatériaux et Prévision de l’Altération », Nanosciences et Innovation pour les Matériaux, la Biomédecine et l'Énergie  (NIMBE, UMR 3685, CEA/CNRS)
Iron paleometallurgy of European Iron Ages: production organization and iron products circulation
LAPA-NIMBE, CEA Saclay, Bâtiment 637, pièce 109F, F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette
Tel. +33 (0)1 69 08 23 05 / Fax. +33 (0) 1 69 08 69 23

Guillaume Hulin, Chargé d’opération et de recherche, Inrap
Archaeological geophysics
Inrap, Direction Scientifique et Technique, 7 rue de Madrid, 75008 Paris
Tel. +33 (0)1 40 08 81 06 / Port. +33 (0)6.84.63.05.06 / guillaume.hulin@inrap.fr

Scientific committee

  • Bouquillon (Paris)

  • J.-P. Bravard (Lyon)

  • O. Buchsenschutz (Paris)

  • N. Cantin (Bordeaux)

  • Ph. Colomban (Paris)

  • M. Dabas (Paris)

  • Ph. Dillmann (Paris)

  • P. Fluzin (Belfort)

  • B. Gratuze (Orléans)

  • M.-F. Guerra (Paris)

  • P. Guibert (Bordeaux)

  • P. Hoffsummer (Liège, Belgique)

  • N. Huet (Marseille)

  • C. Leroyer (Rennes)

  • I. Liritzis (Grèce)

  • M. Magetti (Fribourg, Suisse)

  • D. Marguerie (Rennes)

  • Ph. Marinval (Toulouse)

  • M. Martinon-Torres (Royaume-Uni)

  • C. Oberlin (Lyon)

  • M. Pernot (Bordeaux)

  • T. Rehren (Londres, Royaume-Uni)

  • H. Richard (Besançon)

  • L. Robiola (Toulouse)

  • A. Schmitt (Lyon)

  • V. Serneels (Suisse)

  • A. Tabbagh (Paris)

  • M. Vendrell-Saz (Barcelone, Espagne)

  • J.-D. Vigne (Paris)

  • Ph. Walter (Paris)

Supports

ArcheoSciences is published with the financial support of the Centre national de la recherche scientifique and the ministère de la Culture et de la Communication.

ArcheoSciences is indexed in:

  • Thomson-Reuters (ISI) Web of Knowledge (in Science Citation Index Expanded, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, Arts ans Humanities Citation Index) ;

  • FRANCIS (Vandœuvre-les-Nancy, France) ;

  • BIAB (British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography, Londres, Great Britain) ;

  • Anthropological Literature (Cambridge, USA), AATA (Art and Archaeology Technical Abstracts, USA) et Getty Conservation Institute Project Bibliographies (USA).

Publisher

ArcheoSciences is published by the Presses universitaires de Rennes since the number 30-2006.


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