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ÆÚ¿¯Ãû³Æ£ºBULLETIN OF ENGINEERING GEOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT

ISSN£º1435-9529
³ö°æÆµÂÊ£ºQuarterly
³ö°æÉ磺SPRINGER HEIDELBERG, TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, HEIDELBERG, GERMANY, D-69121
  ³ö°æÉçÍøÖ·£ºhttp://www.springer.com/west/home?SGWID=4-102-0-0-0
ÆÚ¿¯ÍøÖ·£ºhttp://www.springer.com/west/home/generic/search/results?SGWID=4-40109-70-1129237-0
Ó°ÏìÒò×Ó£º0.627(2008)
Ö÷Ìâ·¶³ë£ºENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL
±ä¸üÇé¿ö£º2007new

ÆÚ¿¯¼ò½é(About the journal)    Ͷ¸åÐëÖª(Instructions to Authors)    ±à¼­²¿ÐÅÏ¢(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
Aims and scope
Engineering geology, is defined in the statutes of the IAEG as the science devoted to the investigation, study and solution of engineering and environmental problems which may arise as the result of the interaction between geology and the works or activities of man, as well as of the prediction of and development of measures for the prevention or remediation of geological hazards.

Engineering geology embraces:

the definition of the geomorphology, structure, stratigraphy, lithology and ground water conditions of geological formations; the characterisation of the mineralogical, physico-geomechanical, chemical and hydraulic properties of all earth materials involved in construction, resource recovery and environmental change; the assessment of the mechanical and hydrological behaviour of soil and rock masses; the prediction of changes to the above properties with time; the determination of the parameters to be considered in the stability analysis of engineering works and earth masses; the improvement and maintenance of the environmental condition and properties of the terrain.

The aims of the International Association for Engineering Geology and the Environment are:

- to promote and encourage the advancement of engineering geology through technological activities and research;
- to improve teaching and training in engineering geology;
- to collect, evaluate and disseminate the results of engineering geological activities on a world wide basis.

These aims are pursued by:

- encouraging the formation of national groups of engineering geologists and their affiliation with the Association;
- the organisation of congresses, symposia and other meetings;
- the creation and operation of specialist commissions and other organisational units for the study of matters of interest to the Association;
- the publication of the scientific and technical achievements of members of the IAEG in the IAEG's own periodical and relevant news in the IAEG newsletter;
- interacting with other scientific and technical associations as may be appropriate.

Instructions to Authors
Instructions for Authors
Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment


1. Legal Requirements
The author(s) guarantee(s) that the manuscript will not be published elsewhere in any language without the consent of the copyright owners, that the rights of third parties will not be violated, and that the publisher will not be held legally responsible should there be any claims for compensation.

Authors wishing to include figures or text passages that have already been published elsewhere are required to obtain permission from the copyright owner(s) and to include evidence that such permission has been granted when submitting their papers. Any material received without such evidence will be assumed to originate from the authors.

Manuscripts must be accompanied by the ‘‘Copyright Transfer Statement’’. The form is regularly published in this journal or can be obtained from www.springer.com/journal/10064
2. Editorial Procedure
Manuscripts should be submitted in English. The text should have a 1.5 line spacing and all figures, tables etc should be on separate sheets at the end of the paper. Two hard copies should be sent to:



A. Brian Hawkins
Charlotte House
22 Charlotte Street
Bristol BS1 5PZ

UK



Manuscripts in French should be sent to:



R. Cojean
Universit?Marne-la-Valle?
Bâtiment IFI
Centre de Géologie de l’Ingénieur
5 boulevard Descartes
Champs-sur-Marne
77454 Marne-la-Valle?
Cedex 2

France


Les instructions aux auteurs, pour les articles en français, peuvent être consultées via le service www.springer.com/journal/10064.

Please be sure to include your e-mail address and your fax number.
3. Manuscript Preparation
General remarks



To help you prepare your manuscript, Springer offers a template that can be used with Winword 7 (Windows 95), Winword 6 and Word for Macintosh. For details see point 4. The text should be 1.5 line spacing; figures, tables etc must be provided separately and not embedded in the text. Footnotes to the text should be avoided. Where essential, they should be numbered conecutively and placed at the bottom of the page to which they refer.
All manuscripts are subject to copy editing. Genus and species names should be in italics. SI units should be used throughout except where non-SI units are more common [e.g. litre (l) for volume].


Title page
The title page should include:



A concise and informative title


The name(s) of the author(s)


The affiliation(s) and address(es) of the author(s)


The e-mail address, telephone and fax numbers of the communicating author


Abstract



For English manuscripts, this should not exceed 150 words. It should clearly identify the subject matter, the scope of the work and the conclusions reached. For French manuscripts, in addition to the 150 word Résum? an extended abstract or summary of the paper should be provided in English (400?00 words), expanding on the abstract to include the main discussion points such that the main import of the paper is conveyed to non French speaking readers.

Maximum of six keywords should be supplied after the Abstract for indexing purposes.

Essential footnotes to the text should be numbered consecutively and placed at the bottom of the page to which they refer.


Text



The Introduction should state the purpose of the investigation and give a short review of the pertinent literature.


The Results section should describe the outcome of the study. Data should be presented as concisely as possible, if appropriate in the form of tables or figures, although very large tables should be avoided, such data can be published as electronique supplementary material (see point 5 below).


The Discussion should be an interpretation of the results and their significance with reference to work by other authors.


Acknowledgements. These should be as brief as possible. Any grant that requires acknowledgement should be mentioned. The names of funding organizations should be written in full.



References

The list of References should only include works that are cited in the text and that have been published or accepted for publication. Personal communications should only be mentioned in the text. If available the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) of the cited literature should be added at the end of the reference in question.

Example:
Dyall KG (1998) Relative and non-relative finite nucleus optimized double zeta basis sets for the elements. Theor Chem Acc 99: 366?71 DOI 10.10007/ s002149800025

References should be cited by author and year (e.g. Hammer 1994; Hammer and Sjöqvist 1995; Hammer et al. 1993) and listed in alphabetical order in the reference list.

Examples:

Journal articles:



Dick JC, Shakoor A (1992) Lithographical controls of mudrock durability. Q J Eng Geol 25: 31?6


Books:



Walton G, Cobb AE (1984) Mining subsidence. In: Attewell PB, Taylor RK (eds) Ground movements and their effects on structures. Blackie, Glasgow, pp 216?42


Symposium volumes:



Demchyshyn MG (1997) Landslide hazard in urban areas. In: Proceedings of the International Symposium on Environmental Geology and the Environment. Proc Int Symp Eng Geology Environment 1: 587?92


If available the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) of the cited literature should be added at the end of the reference in question.

Example:



Dyall KG (1998) Relative and non-relative finite nucleus optimized double zeta basis sets for the elements. Theor Chem Acc 99: 366?71 DOI 10.10007/ s002149800025
Illustration Style
Illustrations and Tables

All figures and tables should be referred to in the text. Illustrative material (photographs, graphs or diagrams) should be numbered consecutively. Figure parts should be identified by lower-case roman letters. All figures and tables must be provided on separate sheets at the end of the script and must not be embedded in the text.

For submission of figures in electronic form see below.

Line drawings



All line drawings should be prepared on a computer.The lettering should be in Helvetica or similar, consistent thoughout the paper and appropriately sized bearing in mind any nex´cessary reduction.


Half-tone illustrations (black and white and color)



Please submit well-contrasted photographic prints with the top indicated on the back. Magnification should be indicated by scale bars.


Size of figures



The figures should either match the width of the column (8.7 cm) or be 11.7 cm or 17.7 cm wide. The maximum length is 23.8 cm.


Figure legends



Figure legends must be brief, self-sufficient explanations of the illustrations. A list of captions should be placed at the end of the text.


Tables



Tables should have a title and a legend explaining any abbreviation used in that table. Footnotes to tables should be indicated by superscript lower-case letters (or asterisks for significance values and other statistical data).


Color Illustrations



Online publication of color illustrations is free of charge. For color in the print version, authors will be expected to make a contribution (€ 950, US $ 1150, plus 16% VAT) towards the extra costs, irrespective of the number of color figures.



4. Electronic submission of final version
Preparing your manuscript

Text

The Word template is available at:



via ftp:
Address: ftp.springer.de/
User ID: ftp
Password: your own e-mail address
?Directory: /pub/word/journals
?file names: either sv-journ.zip or sv-journ.doc and sv-journ.dot


via browser:
ftp://ftp.springer.de/pub/Word/journals
file names: sv-journ.zip or sv-journ.doc and sv-journ.dot


The zip file should be sent uuencoded.

Layout guidelines

Use a normal, plain font (e.g., Times Roman) for text.
Other style options:



for textual emphasis use italic types.


for special purposes, such as for mathematical vectors, use boldface type.


Use the automatic page numbering function to number the pages.


Do not use field functions.


For indents use tab stops or other commands, not the space bar.


Use the table functions of your word processing program, not spreadsheets, to make tables.


Use the equation editor of your word processing program or MathType for equations.


Place any figures, or tables and captions at the end of the manuscript.


Submit all figures as separate files and do not integrate them within the text.


Data formats

Save your work in two versions:



Text:
- RTF (Rich Text Format) or Word
- pdf (a single pdf file including text, tables and figures)


Figures: EPS or TIFF


Illustrations

The preferred figure formats are EPS for vector graphics exported from a drawing program and for halftone illustrations. EPS files must always contain a preview in TIFF of the figure. The file name (one file for each figure) should include the figure number. Figure legends should be included in the text and not in the figure file.

Scan resolution:



Scanned line drawings should be digitized with a minimum resolution of 1200 dpi relative to the final figure size. For digital halftones, 300 dpi is usually sufficient.


Colour illustrations:



Store colour illustrations as RGB (8 bits per channel) in TIFF format.


Vector graphics:



Fonts used in the vector graphics must be embedded. Please do not draw with hairlines. The minimum line width is 0.2 mm (i.e., 0.567 pt) relative to the final size.
General Information on Data Delivery


On a diskette [you may use .tar, .zip, .gzip (.gz), .sit, and compress (.Z)]


On a ZIP cartridge


On a CD-ROM


Please always supply the following information with your data:



journal title


operating system


word processing program


drawing program


image processing program


compression program


The file name should be memorable (e.g., author name), have no more than 8 characters, and include no accents or special symbols. Use only the extensions that the program assigns automatically.

5. Electronic Supplementary Material
Electronic supplementary material (ESM) for an article in the journal will be published in SpringerLink provided the material is:
- submitted to the Editors in electronic form together with the paper and is subject to peer review.
- accepted by the Executive Editor

ESM may consist of

- informations that cannot be printed: animations, video clips, sound recordings
- informations that is more convenient in electronic form: sequences, spectral data etc.
- large orginal data that relate to the paper. e.g. additional tables, illustrations (color and black & white), etc.

After acceptance by the Executive Editor ESM will be published as received from the author in the online version only. Reference will be given in the printed version.
6. Proofreading
Authors should make their proof corrections on a printout of the pdf file or use the online correction facilities provided with the proof. They should check that the text is complete and that all figures and tables are included. After online publication, further changes can only be made in the form of an Erratum, which will be hyperlinked to the article. The author is entitled to formal corrections only. Substantial changes in content, e.g. new results, corrected values, title and authorship are not allowed without the approval of the responsible editor. In such a case please contact the Editor-in-Chief before returning the proofs to the publisher.
7. Offprints
25 offprints of each contribution are supplied free of charge. If you wish to order additional offprints you must return the order form with the corrected proof.
E-content
Online Version
For authors and editors
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Editorial Board
Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief
A. B. HAWKINS
Charlotte House
22 Charlotte Street
Bristol BS 5PZ
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 117 92 51 880
Fax: +44 117 92 73 994
e-mail: brian_hawkins@btconnect.com

Assistant to Editor-in-Chief
M. Trott

Co-Editor
R. COJEAN
Universit?Marne-la-Vallée
Bâtiment IFI
Centre de Géologie de l'Ingénieur
5 boulevard Descarted
Champs sur Marne
77454 Marne-la-Vallée, Cedex 2
France
Tel: +33 14 05 19 176
Fax: +33 14 32 63 656
e-mail: cojean@cgi.ensmp.fr 

Executive Committee 2007-2010

President
Dr. Fred BAYNES
Baynes Geologic
10/272 Hay Street
Subiaco WA 6008
Australia
Tel: + 61 89 381 94 98
e-mail: fredb@iinet.net.au


Immediate Past President
Dr. Niek RENGERS
Kortenaerstraat 15
7513 Ac Enschede
The Netherlands
Tel: + 31 53 430 45 34
e-mail: rengers@itc.nl

Secretary General
Dr. Michel Deveughèle
Ecole des Mines de Paris
Géomécanique et Géologie de l'Ingénieur
UMLV - Bâtiment IFI
Cit?Descartes
5, boulevard Descartes
Champs-sur-Marne
77454 Marne-la-Vallée cedex 2
France
Tel: 33 1 49 32 90 10
e-mail: michel.deveughele@ensmp.fr

Deputy Secretary General
Dr. Sébastien DUPRAY
CETE de Lyon -l Groupe Mécanique des roches
Laboratoire Régional des Ponts et Chaussées
25, ave Francois-Mitterand
Case n?1
69674 Bron cedex 01
France
Tel. + 33 4 72 14 32 80
e-mail:sebastian.dupray@equipement.gouv.fr

Treasurer
Dr. Pierre POTHÉRAT
CETE de Lyon
Laboratoire Régional des Ponts et Chaussées
25, av. Francois-Mitterand
Case n?1
69674 Bron Cedex
France
Tel. + 33 4 72 14 32 77
e-mail: pierre.potherat@equipement.gouv.fr

Vice-president for Africa
Dr. Philip PAIGE-GREEN
CSIR Built Environment
P.O. Box 395
Pretoria 0001
South Africa
Tel. + 27 12 841 29 24
e-mail: ppaigegr@csir.co.za

Vice-president for Asia
Prof. WU Faquan
Geo-engineering Centre
Institute of Geology and Geophysics
Chinese Academy of Sciences
P.O. Box 9825
Beijing 10029
P.R. of China
Tel. + 86 10 62 00 84 61
e-mail:engineer2003@mail.igcas.ac.cn

Vice-president for Australasia
Mr. Alan MOON
Coffey Geotechnics Pty Ltd
14 B Henley Beach Road
Mile End SA 5031
Australia
Tel. + 61 8 83 52 17 44
e-mail: alan_moon@coffey.com.au

Vice-president for North America
Prof. Scott F. BURNS
Portland State University
Geology Department
P.O. Box 751
Portland, Oregon 97207
USA
Tel. + 1 503 725 33 89
e-mail: burnss@pdx.edu

Vice-president for South America
Dr. Francisco NOGUEIRA DE JORGE
Rua Itajara, 299
Apto. 171
Villa Andrade
Sao Paulo, SP - CEP 05717-250
Brazil
Tel. + 55 11 37 44 68 17
e-mail:francisco.engeo@terra.com.br

Vice-presidents for Europe
Prof. Carlos Delgado
Escuela Universitaria de Ingenieria Técnica de Obras
Publicas
Calle Alfonso XII, n? y 5
28014 Madrid
Spain
Tel. + 34 91 336 77 57
carlos.delgado@upm.es

Mr. Daniel MORFELDT
Mineconsult AB
Banergatan 37
115 22 Stockholm
Sweden
Tel. + 46 8 662 20 60
e-mail: info@mineconsult.se

Editorial Board

H Chen
hchen@ntu.edu.tw
J-LDurville
Jean-Louis Durville@equipement.gouv.fr
M de Freitas
m.defreitas@imperial.ac.uk
J Keaton
JRKeaton@mactec.com
P Marinos
marinos@central.ntua.gr
H Park
hpark@snu.ac.kr
L Persson
lars.persson@sgu.se
R Ulusay
resat@hacettepe.edu.fr



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