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ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR PUBLICATION |
National Academy publications are the vehicle in which the results of scientific inquiry, guided by the scientific method, are shared with other geoscience researchers and made available to a wider public audience. Results presented in this journal advance research, inform governmental policy decisions, educate students, and assist the private sector in a wide range of endeavors. Thus it is important to maintain a high level of quality and integrity in its publications, which is a responsibility that rests with all those involved in the publication process – authors, reviewers, and editors. Adherence to these guidelines should promote fair treatment of manuscripts through the peer review process.
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Authors and Co-authors
3.1. Manuscripts should contain original, new results, data, ideas
and/or interpretations not previously published or under consideration
for publication elsewhere (including electronic media and databases).
3.2. Authors should be encouraged to avoid fragmentation of their work
where practical, so that the submitted manuscript is as comprehensive
and authoritative as possible.
3.3. Authors should inform the Editor of related manuscripts under
consideration elsewhere and provide copies if requested.
3.4. Fabrication of data, results, selective reporting of data, theft of
intellectual property of others, and plagiarism are unethical practices
and unacceptable.
3.5. Information obtained privately (e.g., in conversation,
correspondence, or discussion with third parties) should be avoided as
it is not in the public domain and is thus unverifiable. If considered
necessary, it should not be used or reported in a manuscript without
explicit permission from the party with whom the information originated.
Information obtained in the course of confidential services (e.g.,
refereeing manuscripts or grant applications) should be treated
similarly.
3.6. Manuscripts will contain proper citation of works by others,
especially publications of the original hypotheses, ideas, and/or data
upon which manuscript is based or addresses.
3.7. Data and/or samples (especially unusual or rare materials) upon
which a publication is based should be made available to other
scientists, except in special circumstances (patent protection, privacy,
etc.), in the manuscript or through accessible data repositories,
databases, museum collections, or other means when requested.
3.8. Authorship
3.8.1. Authorship should be limited to those who have made significant
contributions to the concept, design, execution or interpretation of the
work reported in a manuscript; others who have contributed should be
acknowledged;
3.8.2. Author order should be agreed on by all authors as should any
changes in authors and order that occur while the manuscript is under
review or revision. Changes in authorship must be submitted to the
Editor in writing and must be signed by all authors involved.
3.8.3. Authors and co-authors should review and ensure the accuracy and
validity of results prior to submission; co-authors should have
opportunity to review manuscript before submission.
3.9. Authors should reveal to the Editor any potential conflict of
interest (e.g., a consulting or financial interest in a company) that
might be affected by publication of the results contained in a
manuscript. The authors should ensure that no contractual relations or
proprietary considerations exist that would affect the publication of
information in a submitted manuscript.
3.10. Authors are encouraged to disclose major funding sources (e.g.,
government agencies, private foundations, private industry,
universities) for reported research. |
4. Reviewers
4.1. A reviewer should disclose real or perceived conflict of interests
to the Editor before agreeing to write a review. Examples include, but
are not restricted to, past (within the last 5 years) or current
collaboration, close friend, employer or employee, family relationship,
institutional relationship, past or present graduate advisor or advisee,
someone with whom the reviewer has had past or ongoing acrimonious
relations, or situations where the reviewer could stand to gain
economically by publication or rejection of the manuscript. The Editor
will decide if the conflict is severe enough to prevent the reviewer
from writing a fair, objective review.
4.2. A reviewer should decline to review a manuscript if she/he feels
technically unqualified, if a timely review cannot be done, or if the
manuscript is from a scientific competitor with whom the reviewer has
had an acrimonious professional relationship, or a conflict of interest
as defined above (section 4.1).
4.3. Reviewers should be encouraged, but not required, to sign reviews.
The Editor will preserve anonymity of reviewers should a reviewer elect
to remain anonymous.
4.4. Reviewers must treat the manuscript as confidential.
4.5. Reviewers must ask the Editor for permission to discuss the paper
with others for specific advice, giving names and reasons for such
consultation.
4.6. Reviewers must not pass the manuscript to another to carry out the
review without permission from the Editor.
4.7. Reviewers must not use information, data, theories, or
interpretations of the manuscript in their own work until that
manuscript is in press or published unless the author has given
permission to do so.
4.8. Reviewers should clearly support and justify the basis for their
review analysis.
4.9. Reviewers should alert the Editor to similar manuscripts published
or under consideration for publication elsewhere in the event they are
aware of such. However, it is the responsibility of the Editor, not the
reviewer, to decide on the proper course of action once so informed. |
Types of Articles published in Revue Roumaine de Geologie
• Research Articles are presentations of data sets, experimental
results, theoretical analyses, or numerical simulations. These
thoroughly documented papers should use the scientific method in
reaching conclusions and have immediate, far-reaching implications or
advance the understanding of a problem or question related to a
sub-discipline of the earth sciences. Although no rigid page limit is in
place, authors are expected to provide concise text and illustrations
that use page space efficiently.
• Review Articles, either scholarly or pedagogical, facilitate
communication among scientists from a broad range of disciplines through
discussion of recent papers of interest or important advances in a
particular field or fields.
• Comments and Replies provide a forum in which published papers
can be discussed.
• Special volumes. The editors can invite articles to be
submitted on a topical issue, which can be published as a stand-alone
volume of the journal.
• Other. Obituaries, book reviews, short communications are
occasionally published by the journal. |
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