Geoscience Journal Impact Factors
Annual Review of Physical Sciences
BSSA -- Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America Click here to get online access for SSA members, and here for submitting a paper
Computers & Geosciences Click here for codes.
Eos . Click here for submission.
EPSL -- Earth and Planetary Science Letters
G-cubed -- Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems Click here for paper submission
Geophysics. Click here for online access (QE500 .G45)
Geology click here for archives, and here for submitting a paper
Geology Today (QE1 .G5285.)
Geosphere . Click here to submit a paper
Geotimes (QE1 .G56)
GJI -- Geophysical Journal International (QC801 .G3819) for authors
GRL -- Geophysical Research Letters --- Manuscript Tracking system (QE500 .G37)
Journal of African Earth Sciences
JGR -- Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth --- Manuscript Tracking system (QC811 .J623)
Lithos (QE1 .L47)
Nature (click here for OnLine submission (Q1.N2)
PAGEOPH -- Pure and Applied Geophysics
PEPI -- Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors
Russian Geology and Geophysics
Science. Click here for author information. (Q1. S352)
SRL -- Seismological Research Letters. Click here for submitting a paper
Tectonics (QE601 .T392: 1983-)
Tectonophysics (QE500 .T4: 1964-. )
Terra Nova (QE1 .T42: 1998-. )
A big day for researchers is reading articles. Read the latest articles to learn about the latest cutting-edge developments in a discipline.
This article describes several ways to get the latest articles in a timely manner, as well as some of the journals I follow/subscribe.
There are several ways to track the latest articles:
RSS feeds are my most recommended way to subscribe to journals.
RSS stands for Simple Information Aggregation, and its role is to subscribe to updates on various websites, blogs, etc. The focus of this article is not to introduce RSS. If you are interested, please search for it yourself to understand what RSS is.
Almost all journals support RSS feeds, and the latest articles using RSS feeds have the following advantages:
There are many kinds of RSS readers, and readers can choose according to their own preferences. I am currently using Inoreader . One of the hassles of using RSS feeds is that you need to find the RSS feed address on the home page of each journal and copy it into the RSS reader.
I subscribed to the following journals using RSS and created an RSS combo package. For Inoreader users can directly subscribe combination package , a one-time subscription to periodicals I am concerned, when I subscribe to a new journal, where you will be updated simultaneously. For non-Inoreader user, you can download the combined package , and then import into your RSS reader you are using can be.
I currently subscribe to the following journals using RSS:
In addition to this, I also subscribed to the following special RSS feeds:
Most journals also offer the ability to subscribe to emails. Generally speaking, you only need to register an account with the website to which the journal belongs (such as Wiley, ScienceDirect, Nature, Science, etc.), find the content related to "Subscribe" in the account, and then subscribe to the "Current Issue" of each journal.
I subscribed to the following journals via email:
These journals are comprehensive journals. Nature and Science are weekly, which contains a lot of non-articles. If you use RSS feeds to display too many irrelevant things, you can use the email subscription to see the journal's own typographic content. In other journals, too many articles are updated every day, and there is no way to subscribe to only relevant articles. If you use RSS feeds, there will be too many irrelevant information, so you will also use the mail subscription method.
The following journals do not support RSS subscriptions and can only use email subscriptions:
Scopus is a literature database, similar to web of science, which not only provides regular document search functions, but also sends email notifications to users under the following conditions:
Scopus doesn't seem to be usable. I can use it on campus. It can't be used outside the school. It seems that I have to subscribe to the relevant database in my own unit, so this method is not recommended for the time being.
Google Scholar offers the "Newsletter" feature that can be subscribed via email:
ResearchGate is essentially an academic social networking site that can also be used to keep up with the latest news from certain authors.