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2、官网网址:https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/15252027
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https://gcubed-submit.agu.org/cgi-bin/main.plex
4、官网邮箱:编辑邮箱见下。
5、期刊刊期:月刊,一个月出版一期。
2021年4月16日星期五
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【官网信息】
Call for Papers
Call for Papers for “ Insights into Subduction Zone Processes from Models and Observations of Exhumed Terranes”
Submission Open: November 30 2020
Submission Deadline: November 30, 2022
Special Section Organizers:
Maureen Feineman, The Pennsylvania State University
Sarah Penniston-Dorland, University of Maryland
Matt Kohn, Boise State University
Taras Gerya, ETH Zurich
Philippe Agard, Sorbonne Université
Subduction zones hold a position of unique significance in shaping the evolution of the Earth. They are pathways of chemical exchange between the surface and interior of the Earth, and consequently contribute to such fundamental processes as continent formation, deep Earth water and carbon cycling, and thermal evolution of the mantle. Many important subduction zone processes occur within the interior of the Earth, where they cannot be directly observed. Understanding of these processes is driven by modeling, experiments, and by studies of rocks exhumed from paleo-subduction zones. In recent years, focused international collaborations (ZIP, E-FIRE) have driven progress in modeling, experiments and analysis of exhumed rocks from the subduction plate interface. In this special theme, we solicit contributions that use numerical modeling, experimental petrology, field observation, and analysis of exhumed rocks to better understand physical and chemical processes that occur at depth inside subduction zones.
To submit your manuscript, use the GEMS site for Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems and select the collection’s title from the drop down menu in the Special Section field of the submission form.
Call for Papers for “ A fresh look at the Caribbean plate geosystems”
Submission Open: 1 November 2020
Submission Deadline: 30 November 2023
Special Section Organizers:
Melody Philippon, Géosciences Montepellier
Jenny Collier, Imperial College London
Paul Mann, University of Houston
Yamirka Rojas-Agramontes, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität
The Caribbean region occupies a keystone location during several events with global impact: 1) eruption of the Bahamas hotspot-Central Atlantic magmatic province that led to the Triassic-Jurassic fragmentation of the Pangean supercontinent; formation of the Gulf of Mexico and proto-Caribbean Sea; and setting of a punctual connection between the Pacific and Central Atlantic; 2) the site of the interaction of the Caribbean arc with the Galapagos hotspot to form the massive volcanic event with global effects: Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 of Cenomanian-Turonian age ; 3) the collision of the Caribbean arc with the rifted-passive margins of North and South America during the late Cretaceous to late Cenozoic; and 4) terminal collision of the Panama arc with northwestern South America in the late Miocene-Pliocene that closed the deepwater Pacific-Atlantic connection and initiated the Gulf Stream. All of these processes had a profound effect on the development of mineral resources, paleoclimate and modern-day hazards. This special volume follows up a 2019 Fall AGU special session on crustal structure, deformation and amalgamation of the Caribbean plate and welcomes trans-disciplinary contributions in the areas of geology, geophysics, geochemistry, sedimentary geology, tectonics, paleogeography, paleoceanography, paleoclimate, and biodiversity studies.
To submit your manuscript, use the GEMS site for Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems and select the collection’s title from the drop down menu in the Special Section field of the submission form.
Call for Papers for “Machine learning for Solid Earth observation, modeling and understanding”
Submission Open: 1 September 2020
Submission Deadline: 31 August 2021
Special Section Organizers:
Isabelle Manighetti, Editor in chief of JGR-Solid Earth
Claudio Faccenna, Editor in chief of Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Peter Fox, Editor in chief of Earth and Space Science
Taylor Schildgen, Editor in chief of Tectonics
Greg Beroza, Stanford University
Paul Johnson, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Andrew Curtis, The University of Edinburgh
Elita Li, National University of Singapore
Daniel O’Malley, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Geosciences have witnessed major changes in the last decade, with an almost exponential increase in digital data volumes, accelerated development in computing technologies, and astounding progress in developments and applications of artificial intelligence and machine learning. Data-driven and computer-based by essence, machine learning opens new opportunities for developments and applications in the Geosciences, including the Solid Earth. Whether supervised or unsupervised, machine learning learns from data, natural or synthetic, and recovers patterns and correlations that may accelerate and strengthen our capacities to observe, model, analyze, understand, and predict Solid Earth structures and processes. There are many open challenges however, as most algorithms possess black-box cores, accurate ground truth can be lacking, new tools may be subject to mis-use or over-use, and the incorporation of physics within machine learning is still underdeveloped. The Special Collection aims to bring together papers that demonstrate new science results as well as progress in developments or applications of machine learning or other data science techniques to the broad array of Solid Earth topics represented in JGR Solid Earth, G-Cubed, Tectonics and Earth and Space Science journals. Contributions are expected to clearly identify new knowledge and or understanding that has arisen or that might arise through machine learning applications as well as their evaluations/ validations.
Papers are expected to fulfill the journal requirements, which can be found here for JGR Solid Earth, here for G-Cubed, here for Tectonics, and here for Earth and Space Science.
To submit your manuscript, use the GEMS site for JGR-Solid Earth, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, Earth and Space Science and Tectonics and select the collection’s title from the drop down menu in the Special Section field of the submission form.
Call for Papers for “Cenozoic Evolution of Mountains, Monsoons, and the Biosphere ”
Submission Open: 1 September 2020
Submission Deadline: 1 February 2021
Special Section Organizers:
Peter D. Clift, Louisiana State University
Ann Holbourn, Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel
Christian France-Lanord, CNRS-Université de Lorraine
Hongbo Zheng, Yunnan University
Sarah Feakins, University of Southern California
Guillaume Dupont-Nivet, CNRS - Potsdam University
The Asian monsoon is the type example of a climatic system intimately linked with the tectonic evolution of the solid Earth, yet to date demonstrating these links has been difficult because of a lack of detailed climatic and erosional records that span tectonic timescales, equal to those over which the Himalayas and Tibet have developed. Results from a campaign of scientific ocean drilling are now emerging and must be integrated across the region in order to assess links between monsoonal subsystems, as well as to compare oceanographic records with erosional records and continental environmental data. The marine data moreover must be reconciled with information from onshore concerning the evolving tectonics of the ranges and the height of the Tibetan Plateau. We solicit papers that attempt to refine reconstruction of Asian monsoon development and test models that link development of the continental tectonics and the climate.
To submit your manuscript, use the GEMS site for Gcubed or Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology and select the collection’s title from the drop down menu in the Special Section field of the submission form.
Call for Papers for “Africa plate geosystems”
Submission Open: 18 February 2020
Submission Deadline: 31 December 2020
Special Section Organizers:
Atalay Ayele
Cynthia Ebinger
Mustapha Meghraoui
Lydia Olaka
Elifuraha Saria
The African plate is a key site to explore the interaction between physical and chemical processes occurring at different spatial and time scales, and at different levels, from deep mantle to the surface. Tectonic structure and mantle dynamic control topographic evolution and volcanism, and then gas emission, with consequences on climate, hydrosphere, and biosphere. Despite the strong signals, feedback and interaction between processes are still poorly understood, and mantle to atmosphere fluxes remain weakly constrained regionally. In recent years, numerous multi-disciplinary experiments targeted this frontier geosystem science and produced unprecedented geophysical, geological and geochemical data providing new and unique perspectives on the evolution of the African plate, bringing exciting discoveries on the dynamic processes in the solid Earth and the atmosphere and their consequences for the Earth system.
This theme encompasses papers from different disciplines of geophysics, geochemistry and geosystems, with topics ranging from the structure and dynamics of the African lithosphere and underlying mantle to tectonics and crustal dynamics, nature and origins of intra- and inter-plate deformation and volcanism, interactions between orographic relief and climate, among others. We invite articles of broad interest from all geoscience disciplines, with a focus on understanding the Earth as a system. Editors encourage submissions from African and non-African scientists, and mentoring to those who identify themselves early in the process.
Manuscripts should be submitted to: https://gcubed-submit.agu.org/cgi-bin/main.plex
Call for Papers for “Geosystem science at the AGU centennial: A theme dedicate to Alexander von Humboldt 250th anniversary (2019)”
Submission Deadline: 31 December 2020
Special Section Organizers:
Joshua Feinberg, Marie Edmonds, Onno Oncken, Carina Hoorn, Claudio Faccenna, Thorsten Becker
Alexander von Humboldt was a 19th century polymath, explorer and geologist. He is perhaps best known for his global vision and for shaping the field of biogeography, but also played a fundamental role in developing fundamental fields on geosciences like geomagnetism, volcanology, mineralogy on so on.
Humboldt measured magnetic intensity on all his travels across Europe, South America and Asia and first observed the magnetic variations from equator to pole. He also aimed at establishing a network of geomagnetic observatories and encouraged others to do measurements. Similarly, he made essential contributions to the field of volcanology and discussed the concept of volcanism in relation with climate change. While on his journey across Russia he predicted the occurrence of diamonds in the Ural, which was subsequently was confirmed by findings.
On the 14th of September of 2019 it will be Alexander von Humboldt’s 250th birth anniversary and also the AGU centennial. This G-Cubed theme is to commemorate Alexander von Humboldt's anniversary and for his pioneer, holistic view of geosystem. Inspired by his vision, this theme will host cross-disciplinary contributions on geoscience, addressing feedback and connections between different processes at different scales: from geomagnetism to volcanology and life evolution, from topography and biodiversity to mantle dynamics just to name a few.
Manuscripts should be submitted to: https://gcubed-submit.agu.org/cgi-bin/main.plex
Call for Papers for “Carbon degassing through volcanoes and active tectonic regions”
Submission Deadline: 31 December 2019
Special Section Organizers:
Tobias Fischer, Alessandro Aiuppa, Marie Edmonds
Carbon exchange between the Earth’s interior, the atmosphere and hydrosphere plays a fundamental role in planetary and atmospheric evolution. The main identified pathways of carbon release from the solid Earth are volcanoes and regions of diffuse degassing in tectonically active areas, yet the quantities, sources, variability and processes of carbon release remain poorly constrained. This special theme is on the observations, quantification and models of carbon transfer from the Earth’s crust and mantle to the surface. It includes emphasis on temporal and regional degassing variability, utilization of carbon degassing as volcano and earthquake monitoring tool, and interdisciplinary approaches to quantify carbon emissions. The theme includes results from the Deep Carbon Observatory Deep Earth Carbon Degassing (DCO-DECADE) initiative as well as contributions from the broader community interested in carbon exchange on Earth.
Manuscripts should be submitted to: https://gcubed-submit.agu.org/cgi-bin/main.plex
Call for Papers for “Clumped Isotope Geochemistry: From Theory to Applications”
Submission Deadline: 31 December 2019
Special Section Organizers:
Aradhna Tripati, John Eiler, Stefano Bernasconi, Cedric John
Clumped isotope geochemistry involves studying the properties of isotopic species that contain more than one rare isotope. Measurements can shed light on a broad range of topics of interest to geoscientists, including geothermometry, biomineralization, tectonics, diagenesis, atmospheric budgets, and rates of geochemical processes. A major focus is geothermometry, as temperature is a fundamental intensive variable in any physical system and accurate estimates of temperatures are a requirement for understanding most geological processes. This special issue will include papers dealing with all aspects of clumped isotope geochemistry in different molecules and minerals, including methodological advances, theoretical studies, laboratory experiments, and applications to modern and ancient systems.
Manuscripts should be submitted to https://gcubed-submit.agu.org/cgi-bin/main.plex
Call for Papers for “Tethyan dynamics: from rifting to collision ”
Submission Open: 1 March 2019
Submission Deadline: 1 December 2020
Special Section Organizers:
Bo Wan, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Douwe J.J. van Hinsbergen, Utrecht University
Stephane Guillot, Université Grenoble Alpes
Marco Malusa, Università Milano Bicocca
Ritske Huismans, University of Bergen
Yener Eyuboglu, Karadeniz Technical University
Tethyan ocean closure created nearly 15,000-km long suture zones on Earth from the southwest Europe to the southeast Asia. The ocean closure resulted in high mountains at continental margins, and deformed continental interiors several thousand kilometers inside, which further influenced the global climate and ocean environments. Subsequently, the Tethyan evolution has played a crucial role for the Earth system by strong interactions among layers in Earth’s ecosphere. The Tethyan evolution can be summarized by continental fragments rifting from Gondwana, drifting and collision towards components of Laurasia. Since the Paleozoic, such processes repeatedly opened new ocean basins from Gondwana and subducted old oceanic crust beneath Laurasia. Many studies have described the kinematics of such processes, but the dynamics controlling such unique phenomena is still highly debated. The special volume aims for a better understanding of whole-Tethys processes “Why the fragments rifted from Gondwana and kept colliding with Laurasia continuously?”, as well as reconstructions of the Tethys both in time (from Paleo- to Neo-Tethys evolution) and in space (e.g., Alps, Mediterranean to SE Asia). We invite contributions of broad interest across disciplines with topics including but not limited to, rifting dynamics, subduction dynamics, and collision dynamics in the Tethyan realm. Both large-scale review articles and original research articles are welcome.
This is a joint collection between Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems and Tectonics. Manuscripts should be submitted through the GEMS portal for the relevant journal. For additional information please contact: g-cubed@agu.org or tect@agu.org.
Call for Papers for “Polar region geosystems”
Submission Open: 01 May 2018
Submission Deadline: 01 May 2020
Special Section Organizers:
Fausto Ferraccioli
Carmen Gaina
John Goodge
Sergei Lebedev
Douglas Wiens
Tectonic structure and evolution of the Arctic and Antarctic regions have a profound effect on the ice sheets, climate and sea-level change. Yet, they have long remained poorly understood, due to the regions' inhospitable environments. In recent years, numerous multi-disciplinary studies targeted these frontier regions and produced unprecedented geophysical, geochemical and other data sampling. Analysis of the new data should bring exciting discoveries on the dynamic processes in the solid Earth and the cryosphere and their consequences for the Earth system. This theme encompasses papers from different disciplines of geophysics, geochemistry and geosystems, with topics ranging from the structure and dynamics of the Polar regions' lithosphere and underlying mantle to tectonics and crustal dynamics, nature and origins of intra- and inter-plate volcanism, and ice-sheet dynamics, among others. We invite articles of broad interest from all disciplines, with a focus on understanding the Earth as a system.
Manuscripts should be submitted through the GEMS website after May 1, 2018. For additional information please contact: g-cubed@agu.org.
Call for Papers for “FRONTIERS IN GEOSYSTEMS: Deep Earth – surface interactions”
Submission deadline: 31 January 2018
Associate Editors:
Cin-Ty Lee
Janne Blichert-Toft
Yusuke Yokoyama
The recent years have seen progress in our understanding of the quantitative links between long-term Earth evolution as accommodated in the deep Earth and the evolution of the Earth’s surface systems including the ocean, atmosphere, and biosphere. This special collection consists of cutting-edge, provocative perspectives on a range of issues that have recently been tackled in this field. Those include the interactions between glacial cycles, volcanism, and climate; the link between long-term plate tectonic evolution, mantle structure, and eruption of large igneous provinces; the role of the mantle in controlling the geodynamo; feedbacks between weathering of continental and oceanic crust, tectonics, orogeny and the climate system; long term sea level variations, mantle convection, and climate; the interactions between the interior and the biosphere for the progressive rise of oxygen; and links between mantle convection and mass extinctions.
Manuscripts should be submitted through the GEMS website. For additional information please contact: g-cubed@agu.org.
Claudio Faccenna, Editor in Chief*
Dipartimento Scienze
Universita Roma TRE
L.S.L. Murialdo 1, 00146
and
The University of Texas at Austin
Jackson School of Geosciences
2275 Speedway Stop C9000, Austin, TX 78712-1722
Phone: +39-0657338029
Fax: +39-0657338029
Email: faccenna@uniroma3.it
Editor's Homepage
Whitney Behr
Whitney Behr
Professor of Structural Geology & Tectonics
Department of Earth Sciences
ETH Zürich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)
Sonneggstrasse 5, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
phone: +41 44 632 0465
Email: whitney.behr@erdw.ethz.ch
Editor's Homepage: https://structuretectonics.org/</a
Janne Blichert-Toft
Janne Blichert-Toft*
Laboratoire de Geologie de Lyon, CNRS
Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon
E-mail: jblicher@ens-lyon.fr
Editor's Homepage
Marie Edmonds
Marie Edmonds
University of Cambridge
Earth Sciences Department
Cambridge CB2 3EQ
United Kingdom
Phone: 44-1223-333463
Email: marie.edmonds@esc.cam.ac.uk
Editor's Homepage
Joshua Feinberg
Joshua M. Feinberg
University of Minnesota
Dept. of Earth Sciences
Minneapolis, MN
Email: feinberg@umn.edu
Editor's Homepage
Maureen Long
Maureen D. Long*
Professor of Geology and Geophysics
Yale University
PO Box 208109
New Haven, CT 06520
Phone: 203-432-5031
Email: maureen.long@yale.edu
Editor's Homepage
Carolina R. Lithgow-Bertelloni
Carolina R. Lithgow-Bertelloni
University of California Los Angeles
Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences
595 Charles Young Drive East
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567
Email: clb@epss.ucla.edu
Adina Paytan
Adina Paytan*
University of California, Santa Cruz
Institute of Marine Sciences
Earth and Marine Science Building, Room C308
1156 High Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95064
E-mail: apaytan@ucsc.edu
Peter van der Beek
Peter van der Beek
Professor of General Geology
Institut für Geowissenschaften
Universität Potsdam
Karl-Liebknecht-Str. 24-25
Haus 27, Raum 1.31
14476 Potsdam-Golm
Germany
Office: +49 331 977 5808
Mobile: +49 176 625 63411
Email: vanderbeek@uni-potsdam.de
Editor's Homepage: http://www.geo.uni-potsdam.de
Branwen Williams
Branwen Williams
W.M. Keck Science Department
Claremont McKenna College, Pitzer College, Scripps College
Claremont, CA 91711
Email: bwilliams@kecksci.claremont.edu
Editor’s Assistant
Email: g-cubed@agu.org